Brisbane is set for an absolutely massive weekend, with a huge lineup of international and Australian music, comedy, and major events from 14 to 17 November 2025. Whether you are looking to see iconic international bands, beloved local artists, or laugh at world-class comedy, something is happening across the city. Here is a guide to the must-see events happening this weekend.
Pixies: Bossanova/Tromp Le Monde Set
16 – 17 November 2025 | The Tivoli, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
Iconic US alternative rock legends, the Pixies, are performing a special two-night set at The Tivoli. This tour sees them playing their classic albums Bossanova and Tromp le Monde in full, offering a must-see show for longtime fans.
David Gray Past & Present World Tour
15 – 16 November 2025 | Concert Hall, QPAC, South Brisbane Get Tickets
Acclaimed British singer-songwriter David Gray brings his Past & Present World Tour to the QPAC Concert Hall. Fans can expect a career-spanning set as he performs beloved classics alongside material from his latest album.
2025 Queensland Tourism Awards Gala Ceremony
14 November 2025 | Brisbane Convention & Exhibition Centre, South Brisbane Get Tickets
This is the tourism industry’s premier “night of nights,” celebrating the outstanding achievements of operators across the state. The Gala Ceremony recognises the resilience and innovation of those who have contributed to Queensland’s vibrant tourism sector.
Addison Rae
14 – 15 November 2025 | The Fortitude Music Hall, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
Paul Dempsey Shotgun Karaoke Vol. II National Tour
14 November 2025 | Concert Hall, QPAC, South Brisbane Get Tickets
One of Australia’s most respected musicians, Paul Dempsey, performs his unique Shotgun Karaoke show. The Something for Kate frontman will perform a mix of his solo work, band classics, and fascinating covers in their original key.
The Waifs
14 November 2025 | The Princess Theatre, Woolloongabba Get Tickets
Australian folk-rock legends The Waifs return to Brisbane for what is sure to be a captivating performance. Known for their heartfelt song writing and incredible live shows, this is a chance to see one of the country’s most-loved bands.
Northeast Party House
14 November 2025 | The Tivoli, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
Get ready for a high-energy night with Australian dance-rock favourites Northeast Party House on The Final Party tour. Renowned for their electrifying live sets, the band will perform hits from their extensive catalogue that are guaranteed to get the crowd moving.
Jeremy Zucker
16 November 2025 | The Tivoli, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
American singer-songwriter Jeremy Zucker brings his introspective alt-pop and chill anthems to The Tivoli. Known for hits like “comethru,” his performance promises an evening of emotional connection and cinematic production.
Ashley Gavin
16 November 2025 | The Princess Theatre, Woolloongabba Get Tickets
One of the most in-demand comedians in the US, Ashley Gavin, brings her hilarious Hype Man tour to Australia. She is known for her unfiltered, candid style and viral crowd-work clips that have made her a global sensation.
Stand Up for MND
15 November 2025 | Underground Theatre, Brisbane Powerhouse, New Farm Get Tickets
Enjoy a night of laughter for a fantastic cause at this special charity comedy night. The event raises vital funds for Queenslanders living with Motor Neurone Disease, bringing together a lineup of top comedians for an evening of entertainment.
Night Lovell
15 November 2025 | The Tivoli, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
Canadian rapper Night Lovell brings his Australian Tour 2025 to The Tivoli. As a pioneer of dark, atmospheric cloud-rap, fans can expect an intense show featuring viral hits like “Dark Light.”
HARD-ONS
14 November 2025 | The Brightside, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
Australian punk rock legends the Hard-Ons are set to tear up The Brightside with their high-octane sound. As one of the country’s most influential punk bands, this show is a must for fans of loud, fast, and energetic rock.
GARY OG AUSTRALIAN TOUR
14 November 2025 | Black Bear Lodge, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
Glasgow’s Gary Og, a leading voice in Celtic rebel folk music, brings his passionate performance to the intimate Black Bear Lodge. Celebrating his 20th Australian tour, this will be a lively night filled with powerful ballads and rousing singalongs.
Sean Woodland | An Hour With A Woody!
15 November 2025 | Good Chat Comedy Club, Petrie Terrace Get Tickets
Catch one of Australia’s most reliable and hilarious comedians, Sean Woodland, as he presents his new show. This hour at Brisbane’s dedicated comedy club is perfect for anyone looking for sharp, relatable, and rapid-fire jokes.
Holographic Charizard
15 – 16 November 2025 | Big Fork Theatre, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
This quirky, high-energy show is a comical musical performance where every song is about the greatest Pokemon, Charizard. It’s a fun, strange, and nostalgic journey perfect for fans of improv and nerdy comedy at Brisbane’s home of improv.
With so many world-class options on offer, this is shaping up to be one of the biggest weekends of the year for live entertainment in Brisbane. Be sure to check availability and secure your tickets soon, as many of these events are likely to sell out.
It opened like a front bar on a Sunday morning: people leaning in, swapping notes about work and weather, prices and patience. From Brisbane’s flight path to snowy Perisher and the salt air at Tathra, the calls piled up into a portrait of Australia right now — inventive, weary, funny, stubborn, hopeful.
“It’s Like a City With No Petrol Stations”
Brendan, under Brisbane’s early-morning freighter traffic, runs a cottage industry with a grand title and a very hands-on reality: boutique spare parts for personal electric vehicles. “About twenty percent goes to the States,” he said — a market that can’t get parts thanks to tariff tangles. “It’s like having a whole lot of cars and no petrol stations.” He does it largely alone: “Had someone last week work one day and never came back.”
Macca riffed on prices doing the long march upward — the $20 litre of oil, the coffee that’s quietly dearer, the grocery total that no longer makes sense. “We’re earning more,” he said, “but the money doesn’t buy nearly as much.”
The Beach That’s Beautiful Until It Isn’t
Down in Loch Sport, Steve had a fisherman’s bulletin from Ninety Mile Beach: spring is the crankiest season — wind, a slick of fine weed that makes casting a farce. His YouTube channel Steve Outside posts a Friday weekend outlook and a Tuesday mid-week update. “If you’re driving two or three hours,” he said, “you’d like to know before you go.” He’s walked other long beaches, too — Eighty Mile Beach in WA — but he knows when to tell people to stay home.
UV Light and Underground Rivers
Jason’s crew had come up from Victoria to reline Ipswich stormwater pipes — 375, 600, 675 millimetre mains. “We pull a fibreglass liner in, inflate it, then cook it with UV,” he said. Rain can stop a whole day’s work. He’s noticed something else: “You don’t see rubbish on the roads up here. In Melbourne, it’s truckloads.” Sunday was the day off: a designated-driver run to Kingaroy with his brothers. Between jobs he hunts for Tillandsias — air plants that cling to trees and power lines, “no soil, no roots,” a small, stubborn kind of magic.
Strawberries Don’t Taste the Same Anymore
A throwaway lament — “Why don’t strawberries taste anymore?” — turned into a proper paddock-to-plate reckoning. Doug Moore, once a Navy clearance diver, grew strawberries through the 1980s. He remembers NSW’s lethal yellow disease and the scramble at the Gosford research station to find clean plant stock. In came selector varieties — including lines imported from South Africa — that solved one problem and created another. “They picked for keeping quality,” Doug said. “Not sweetness.”
That choice echoes down the cold aisle today: big, glossy fruit that can ride a truck and sit in a fridge, but rarely sing on the tongue. Doug’s rule of thumb is old-fashioned and accurate: pick or buy to eat today or tomorrow. Beyond that, you’re bargaining with texture, sugar and scent.
Callers added their fieldcraft. Gail in Melbourne said she watches with her nose: “If you can’t smell it, don’t buy it.” Macca linked it to roses and tomatoes — breed for beauty and travel and you bleed away the thing itself. And later, Rick — a grower straddling the Yarra Valley and Queensland — gave the production view: tunnels and hot houses let you coax softer, sweeter fruit, but outdoor crops often need tougher skins to survive. “Some of the best-tasting varieties are harder to grow,” he said. “Keep buying though — the Victorian season’s on and I need the income.”
The strawberry became a metaphor for half the morning: cost-of-living, trade barriers, design choices that travel well but land thin. What’s the premium now — flavour or logistics?
Hay Like Money in the Bank
On the Fleurieu Peninsula, Taz called between bales: half the usual rainfall, perfectly timed, and the shed is filling fast. “Hay in the hay shed is money in the bank,” he said, channelling his grandfather. At 70, he’s still camp-drafting — “a disease” he laughs — sorting a beast from the mob and running a clover-leaf pattern around pegs in 40 seconds. The family worries. He saddles up anyway. “You only live once, mate.”
Sugar, Flood Debris and a Thin Labour Line
In Ingham, Pino Lenza started at 3 a.m. with daughter Zara and young Preston. The harvester eats cane and, this year, whatever the floods left behind: kegs, pods, 44-gallon drums, timber. Miss a scrap and it jams in the base cutters. He’s short of reliable hands and thinks seasonal workers should have a different tax bracket so they can follow the harvests without getting smashed on PAYG. Costs? “Since COVID, everything just keeps going up — tyres, engine oil, filters, labour.” Sugar prices are ordinary. Break-even is a good week.
Cliff looked out over Perisher Valley: roofs sugared white after a snap change. After 35 years at The Sundeck — the country’s highest hotel — he’s sold and turned to the coast, where the Tathra Hotel now has a pocket-sized theatre. He invited Macca to play. “I’ve written that down,” Macca said — the kind of promise that turns into a community night within months.
Letters from Everywhere
The inbox sounded like a town meeting: Spotify up to $15.99, Adobe up 11% (“the dollar”), arguments for the old BOM layout at reg.bom.gov.au, and a nod to Weather Chaser founders Kath and Paul Barrett in Frankston for building clearer radar tools when users got lost in the redesign. Brett in SA pointed at the trade shortage: “Why would you do an apprenticeship when you can make $72/hour pulling beers on a public holiday?” Another note listed the four aluminium smelters — Tomago, Bell Bay, Boyne, Portland — just to set the record straight.
The Bells of Remembrance
Noel Bridge wrote from the Hawkesbury, rallying churches — St Matthew’s in Windsor (our oldest Anglican church), Ebenezer Uniting (1809), Windsor, Richmond, Kurrajong Heights — to toll their bells until 10:59 a.m., then fall silent for the 11 a.m. minute. Macca replayed historian Les Carlyon, who gently pressed a truth we often duck: 8,700 Australians died at Gallipoli; over 50,000 fell on the Western Front. If memory were proportional, Remembrance Day might eclipse Anzac Day. But myth, like a strawberry variety, is something we once chose — and now live inside.
“Larry” to Christchurch
Harness-racing lifer Kevin Seymour rang from WA en route to Christchurch. His pacer Leap to Fame — “Larry” — is the richest Australian pacer ever, nudging $4.7 million, eclipsing Blacks A Fake. The New Zealand Cup is two miles at Addington, a 25,000-person day with a field that includes Republican Party, Merlin, and Kingman. There’s even an AI-generated song about Larry by Robert Marshall. “My wife heard it and burst into tears,” Kevin said. The talk slid, as it must, to what AI means for real songwriters — clever tools that remix the world, and the uneasy theft some artists feel.
Guitars, Break-ins and the Line in the Sand
Nigel Foote came down from Blackheath with two Martin guitars and a story: a dawn break-in, a Holden Commodore with “GUITAR” plates gone in seconds, the keys later found in another stolen car. The cop’s bleak comfort: Commodores are theft magnets now that Holden’s closed and parts are scarce. Nigel played “Both Sides Now” like a benediction anyway — proof that one thing AI still can’t counterfeit is the air moving in a room when a human hand makes a string sing.
A caller named Susan said it plainly: “What AI does is steal from every artist’s life’s work.” Macca’s line in the sand was simple: live. Be in the room. Know it’s real.
Ordinary Sunday Doing Extraordinary Things
A ten-year-old named Ily from Mansfield — a student at Mansfield Steiner School — tucked a phone under her mum Fenella’s elbow and played “Down by the Sally Gardens” on the violin. She busks sometimes and once made $102 in a session. Asked why she plays, she shrugged through the line: “I just do it for fun.”
And there it was again — the strawberry test for everything: if you can smell it, it’s worth taking home; if you can hear it in the room, it’s worth remembering.
Disclaimer: ‘Australia All Over’ is a program produced and broadcast by the ABC Local Radio Network and hosted by Ian McNamara. Brisbane Suburbs Online News has no affiliation with Ian McNamara, the ABC, or the ‘Australia All Over’ program. This weekly review is an independent summary based on publicly available episodes. All original content and recordings remain the property of the ABC. Our summaries are written in our own words and are intended for commentary and review purposes only. Readers can listen to the full episodes via the official ABC platforms.
From blockbusters and anniversaries to arthouse premieres, Brisbane’s cinemas are offering one of their most diverse weeks yet. Whether you’re catching a classic at Palace Barracks or diving into something new at Event Cinemas, there’s no shortage of big-screen magic this week.
🎬 Opening This Week
Predator: Badlands
In cinemas from 6 November The iconic sci-fi series returns with a fierce new chapter. Screenings available across Brisbane at Event Cinemas Brisbane City, Carindale, Chermside, Indooroopilly, Mount Gravatt, and Palace Barracks.
Back to the Future (40th Anniversary)
In cinemas from 6 November Take a ride back to 1985 with Marty McFly and Doc Brown in this special 40th anniversary release. Playing at Event Cinemas Brisbane City, Carindale, Chermside, Indooroopilly, Palace Barracks, and Cineplex South Bank.
Die, My Love
In cinemas from 6 November A haunting exploration of motherhood and mental health, adapted from Ariana Harwicz’s acclaimed novel. Catch it at Palace James St, Palace Barracks, Event Chermside, and HOYTS Stafford.
Tummy Tom and the Lost Teddy Bear
In cinemas from 6 November A charming animated tale perfect for kids, featuring a mischievous cat searching for his lost teddy. Showing at Event Carindale, Chermside, Indooroopilly, and Mount Gravatt.
Prime Minister
In cinemas from 6 November A gripping political thriller set in the high-stakes world of government secrecy and ambition. Screening at Event Indooroopilly, Mount Gravatt, and Palace Barracks.
Train Dreams
In cinemas from 6 November A poetic frontier drama adapted from Denis Johnson’s novella, featuring stunning cinematography and quiet power. Screening at Palace Barracks, Dendy Coorparoo, Five Star Cinemas Brisbane City, and Graceville.
🎞️ Special Screenings at GOMA
Hero, Dragon Inn, and Farewell China (8 November) Centre Stage and A Fishy Story (9 November) Brisbane’s Gallery of Modern Art (GOMA) presents a weekend of iconic Asian cinema, celebrating vision, courage, and storytelling mastery.
🎞️ Still Showing
A PAW Patrol Christmas
Continuing screenings A festive favourite for families, still screening at Event Cinemas Carindale, Chermside, Indooroopilly, Mount Gravatt, and HOYTS Stafford.
Bugonia
Continuing screenings A thought-provoking sci-fi drama blending environmental themes with suspense, showing at Event Brisbane City, Chermside, and HOYTS Stafford.
Good Fortune
Continuing screenings This crowd-pleasing romantic comedy continues to draw audiences across Event Cinemas Brisbane City, Indooroopilly, and Cineplex South Bank.
📍 Where to Watch
Event Cinemas Brisbane City, Carindale, Chermside, Indooroopilly, Mount Gravatt
Palace Barracks Brisbane, Palace James St Cinema
Dendy Coorparoo, Dendy Portside
Cineplex South Bank, Cineplex Balmoral
Five Star Cinemas Brisbane City, Graceville, New Farm, Red Hill
HOYTS Stafford, Sunnybank, Ipswich
From explosive sci-fi battles and heart-stirring dramas to the return of beloved classics, Brisbane’s cinemas are buzzing this week. Whether you’re after arthouse sophistication or blockbuster spectacle, the city’s screens are ready to deliver.
The second week of November delivers a strong mix of thrilling new series, returning favourites, and holiday-ready films across every major platform. Whether you’re after true crime, heartfelt drama, or light festive viewing, this week’s releases bring plenty to stream.
Weekly Highlights
Palm Royale: Season 2 returns on Apple TV+ with more glamour, rivalry, and social climbing.
The Vince Staples Show: Season 2 lands on Netflix, offering sharp humour and clever commentary.
Freakier Friday, a fresh take on the classic body-swap comedy, premieres on Disney+.
Maxton Hall: The World Between Us – Season 2 continues the romantic chaos on Prime Video.
The Wedding Banquet, a Korean romcom, debuts on BINGE.
Apple TV+
Pluribus: Season 1 – 7 November 2025 A gripping political drama exploring the blurred lines between democracy and power in an increasingly divided world. Watch on Apple TV+
Palm Royale: Season 2 – 12 November 2025 The high-society drama returns as Maxine Dellacorte fights to secure her place among Palm Beach’s elite. Expect more secrets, betrayals, and exquisite 1960s style. Watch on Apple TV+
Disney+
Love+War – 7 November 2025 A sweeping romance set against the backdrop of global conflict, exploring love, loss, and survival. Watch on Disney+
Fire and Water: Making The Avatar Films – 7 November 2025 A behind-the-scenes documentary uncovering the creative process behind James Cameron’s Avatar universe. Watch on Disney+
Freakier Friday – 12 November 2025 A modern spin on the classic comedy about a mother and daughter who magically swap bodies — with chaos and heartwarming lessons along the way. Watch on Disney+
Netflix
Death by Lightning: Limited Series – 6 November 2025 A true-crime drama chronicling the shocking assassination of President James Garfield and the manhunt that followed. Watch on Netflix
The Vince Staples Show: Season 2 – 6 November 2025 Vince Staples returns with more biting humour and surreal storytelling in this genre-bending series. Watch on Netflix
Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein – 7 November 2025 A bold reimagining of Mary Shelley’s gothic classic, told through del Toro’s signature lens of humanity and horror. Watch on Netflix
Marines: Season 1 – 10 November 2025 An action-packed military drama following elite soldiers navigating the personal and moral costs of combat. Watch on Netflix
A Merry Little Ex-Mas – 12 November 2025 A festive romantic comedy where two exes are forced to reunite for the holidays, leading to rekindled sparks and comedic chaos. Watch on Netflix
Being Eddie – 12 November 2025 A character-driven drama about a man redefining his identity after a major life change. Watch on Netflix
Mrs Playmen: Season 1 – 12 November 2025 A glamorous period drama following a woman who builds a publishing empire during the rise of the adult magazine era. Watch on Netflix
Prime Video
Maxton Hall: The World Between Us – Season 2 – 7 November 2025 The hit German series continues with Ruby and James navigating love, ambition, and class divides in Oxford. Watch on Prime Video
Bat-Fam: Season 1 – 10 November 2025 A fresh animated comedy that gives a humorous spin to Gotham’s most famous family of vigilantes. Watch on Prime Video
Playdate – 12 November 2025 A tense psychological thriller about neighbours whose lives unravel after a seemingly innocent child’s playdate goes wrong. Watch on Prime Video
BINGE
All Her Fault: Limited Series – 6 November 2025 A psychological thriller set in Dublin, where a mother’s search for her missing son unravels a web of secrets and lies. Watch on BINGE
Drop – 9 November 2025 A dark comedy following a group of friends whose weekend getaway takes a disturbing turn. Watch on BINGE
The Wedding Banquet – 9 November 2025 To remain in the country, a gay man agrees to pay for his friend’s IVF treatment on the condition that she marries him. But when his grandmother insists on throwing an extravagant Korean wedding, everything quickly spirals into chaos. Watch on BINGE
DMV: Season 1 – 11 November 2025 A workplace comedy about the absurdities and humanity inside a Department of Motor Vehicles branch. Watch on BINGE
From high-stakes thrillers to heartfelt comedies and returning favourites, this week’s lineup captures the full spectrum of streaming entertainment. Whether you’re diving into Palm Royale’s opulent world or laughing along with The Vince Staples Show, there’s no shortage of must-watch stories for the week ahead.
It was another Sunday stitched together the Macca way — easy, curious, and full of life. From Nhulunbuy’s tropical edge to the cool valleys of Yackandandah and the wheat fields of Brookton, callers chimed in with stories of travel, work, music and memory. There were yarns about old cars and missing church bells, about vineyards, fiddles and faraway cemeteries, all bound by the familiar warmth of voices meeting in the early morning.
Dave from Nhulunbuy
The morning began in Arnhem Land, where Dave Mitchell rang from Nhulunbuy to talk about jobs and the future of local industry. “I just wanted to say hello to our friends at Tomago Aluminium Smelter,” he said, lamenting the loss of Australian manufacturing as overseas ownership grows. Macca listened as Dave traced how decisions at the top can ripple through small communities: “Unless we start to look after ourselves a bit better, our grandchildren are going to really suffer.”
Their chat drifted, as Macca’s often do, from heavy themes to lighter ones. Dave reminisced about a young singer Macca once played on air — “You warned us she was unusual, but gee she was enjoyable” — and how musical careers can flare and fade quickly. They laughed about meeting performers in Tamworth and then moved on to Dave’s pride in local success stories. “We’re still rocking along up here with King Stingray,” he said. “They’ve gone from strength to strength.”
Before hanging up, Dave thanked Macca’s unseen crew: “They’re a well-oiled single-sail machine.” He also recalled Macca’s visit to Nhulunbuy back in 1999, when he’d kept a copy of The Yackandanda Panda poem from that trip — a reminder of how long these Sunday voices have been crossing paths.
Andrew from Congarinni
Further south, Andrew was up before dawn shifting cattle near Congarinni, west of Macksville, after returning from Europe. He’d spent time in Normandy, where a visit to an American war cemetery left a deep impression. “It was absolutely stunning, very solemn,” he said. “You can’t turn your back on history — what they achieved over there was incredible.”
He and Macca talked about unity and disunity in the modern world and how Europe still carries the echoes of its past. The tone then lightened when Andrew confessed to a recent “pathetic” motorbike spill near Menindee. A patch of bulldust sent him airborne, and he ended up thanking the “lovely nurses at Menindee District Hospital” and the Royal Flying Doctor Service for piecing him back together.
Ernest on the Newell Highway
Cruising between Jerilderie and Narrandera, Ernest was towing a vintage Alvis car — “A-L-V-I-S, built in Coventry” — and revelling in the quiet of the Newell. “After Spain’s mountain passes and endless roundabouts, it’s lovely driving here,” he said. He’d just finished a touring rally through the Pyrenees and felt grateful to be home, where the horizon stretches “to ground and sky and nothing in between.”
Dennis Jagmic in Perth
Macca’s conversation with Dennis Jagmic stretched longer, the tone that of two old hands swapping stories over the vineyard fence. Jagmic, now a Swan Valley vigneron and accountant, once kept wicket for Western Australia and South Australia during the 1970s. “We were amateurs back then,” he said. “Forty-five dollars for a Shield game — four days’ work — but we loved it.”
He grew up across from Houghton Vineyard, playing backyard cricket with Tony Mann, who would go on to play Test cricket. Later, Jagmic found himself second in line behind Rod Marsh. “Everyone said, you’re wasting your time here, so I went east,” he recalled. After a stint in Adelaide under Ian Chappell’s captaincy, he still rates Chappell “number one — a man’s man, hard but fair.”
These days, his challenges come from a different field. “The wine industry’s had a wild ride,” he said, citing export troubles with China and rising production costs. “I’ve got people from the Pacific Islands working for me now — locals just don’t seem to want to do the manual stuff.” He worries that schools push university over trade and that “determination counts more than a degree.” For Jagmic, whether in cricket or on the vines, “you’ve got to have it in the heart.”
Tricia Flannery of Mangrove Mountain
Children’s author Tricia Flannery started writing during the pandemic, drawing inspiration from the casuarinas on her 70-acre property at Mangrove Mountain. Her self-published series The Adventures of the She-Oak Critters uses real photographs of local flora and fauna. “It’s all Australian,” she said. “I refuse to have them printed overseas.”
She writes for children aged four to ten, encouraging them to look up from screens and into the bush. “So much out there is cartoonish,” she said. “I wanted something real — where they sit around the fire and look at the stars.” Her next book will take the critters from country to city, sailing down the Hawkesbury to the Harbour Bridge. “The bush is spiritual,” she added. “It’s peaceful. Friends come here and feel it straight away.”
Peter Denahy from Yackandandah
Peter Denahy checked in from Yackandandah, still bleary after a U.S. trip. “I lost a day on the way back — the universe owes me October 31,” he joked. He’d spent weeks performing around Tennessee and North Carolina under a new entertainer’s visa, playing Nashville’s legendary Station Inn thanks to Kristy Cox and The French Family Band.
He met bluegrass icons like Larry Cordle, writer of Highway 40 Blues, and James Monroe, son of Bill Monroe. “The musicians are phenomenal,” he said. “Kids over there play fiddle like pros.” For Denahy, the trip was a reminder of why he plays: “It puts a firecracker under you — you come home wanting to write.”
He’ll soon appear at Majors Creek Festival near Canberra and later at the Yackandandah Folk Festival. “They got the songs and the humour,” he laughed. “I just had to explain the word ‘dunny’.”
Jean from Paterson (near Gympie)
Jean Davis, 80, rang to help listeners navigate the Bureau of Meteorology’s redesigned website. “You can still get the old one,” she said cheerfully, giving the link reg.bom.gov.au. The new site, she complained, “took away all the town names.” Macca agreed that sometimes “change for the sake of change” leaves people worse off. Jean hoped that if enough users went back, “they might be wary about turning it off.”
KJ in Blackburn South
Among the most heartfelt calls came from KJ, walking through the early sun in Blackburn South. He arrived from India in 1993, after years working in oil and gas. “Slowly you change and become Australian,” he said. “My heart says this is where I live.”
KJ described the courtesy and openness he’d found in Melbourne, contrasting it with a recent tram encounter where someone told him to “go back.” His calm reply: “This is my country. I’m here.” He spoke too about rapid immigration growth and the importance of balance — “Criticize the policy, not the people.”
Macca called him “my Australian of the Year,” saying KJ’s story captured the essence of belonging. “We’re all Australian-made,” Macca said, echoing the old song.
Tim from Mollymook
Driving home from Kangaroo Valley, Tim smiled about an evening spent playing cards with his grandchildren. “These kids don’t use devices,” he said. “They made up a game with three cards in five minutes.” For him, a deck of cards teaches imagination, patience and arithmetic — “a one-stop shop.” Macca agreed: small games, big lessons.
Cheryl from the Blue Mountains
Long-time racing fan Cheryl called ahead of Melbourne Cup Day, relishing the theatre of it all. A former costume-maker, she loves “the whole spectacle” but treats it like a science. “You whittle them down — horses that don’t stay 2,500 metres can’t win,” she said. She praised jockeys Jamie Kah and Rachel King and promised to study the form once the weather settled.
Cara in the Hunter Valley
Cara, once from St Kilda and now in the Hunter Valley, phoned with her Cup tips and a memory of saving a stranded Christmas beetle — “fed her up for nine days and let her go.” Expecting a wet track, she fancied Flatten the Curve, winner of the Bowling Green Gold Cup in Kentucky, and Half Yours, ridden by Jamie Kah. “It’s the race that stops the nation,” she said. “Everyone comes together for it.”
Brian on Bribie Island
Brian remembered attending the 1971 Melbourne Cup with friends, carrying eskies of champagne, beer and Kentucky Fried Chicken straight onto the lawn. At the time, he was working on the tunnel under Arthur’s Seat for the Melbourne Sewerage Scheme. “We just spread out rugs in front of the main stand — you couldn’t do that now,” he laughed. He’s lived on Bribie Island for nearly 30 years and still loves a flutter. This year he’s backing Absurd. “I came over from New Zealand, sold everything, and never looked back.”
Jan from Brookton, WA
In Brookton, Jan reported a strange theft: both the Anglican and Catholic church bells had vanished. “The Anglican bell had hung there 130 years,” she said. “The Catholic one for 70.” Fearing they’d been stolen for scrap, she appealed for their return. Macca mentioned Peter Olds’ foundry in Maryborough, one of the few places still casting new bells, but Jan said that wasn’t the point — “They were gifts to the community.”
Richard on the Road to Melbourne
Truck driver Richard was hauling two huge tractors south from Far North Queensland. “It’s lush up here,” he said, after chatting with cheerful service-station staff that morning. He noted that Australia’s population had grown by 1.25 million in two years, then joked that many were now living on wheels: “We’re not house-os or wheel-os — we’re wheelies living in our bloody vehicles.”
Richard also carted vintage Studebaker army trucks built under the 1945 Lend-Lease Program, and finished his call with a grin about a lucky $61 bet that came good at the marina bar.
Joan from Skye
The last call of the show came from Joan in Skye, still glowing from Derby Day at Flemington. “The fashions were beautiful — lots of black and white,” she said. She’d met Michelle Payne — “a beautiful young woman” — and watched Pride of Jenny win by ten lengths. “Sometimes I just make up my mind and go,” she laughed. “The roses, the weather, the people — it’s wonderful.”
Ordinary Sunday Doing Extraordinary Things
From Nhulunbuy’s red earth to Brookton’s wheat fields, from Yackandandah’s fiddles to a truck stop near Hay, the voices on Macca’s show carried the sound of a country still connected by conversation. These callers spoke of work and weather, of bells gone missing and beetles saved, of old cars and new songs, of belonging and gratitude.
What ties them together isn’t distance or background but attitude — that easy warmth that starts with “G’day.” Week after week, Australia All Over reminds us that ordinary people, simply telling their stories, make the nation extraordinary.
Disclaimer: ‘Australia All Over’ is a program produced and broadcast by the ABC Local Radio Network and hosted by Ian McNamara. Brisbane Suburbs Online News has no affiliation with Ian McNamara, the ABC, or the ‘Australia All Over’ program. This weekly review is an independent summary based on publicly available episodes. All original content and recordings remain the property of the ABC. Our summaries are written in our own words and are intended for commentary and review purposes only. Readers can listen to the full episodes via the official ABC platforms.
Brisbane is buzzing with activity this November, offering a spectacular lineup of events to suit every taste. From blockbuster musicals and stand-up comedy to captivating art exhibitions and live music, the city is the place to be. Whether you’re planning a night out at the theatre or looking for a weekend cultural fix, our guide has you covered for the month’s highlights.
Tim Minchin
6 – 7 November 2025 | Brisbane Convention & Exhibition Centre, South Brisbane Get Tickets
The celebrated musician and comedian Tim Minchin brings his unique blend of wit and musical talent to the stage. Prepare for an unforgettable evening of brilliant satire and lyrical genius.
Pretty Woman: The Musical
5 October – 23 November 2025 | Lyric Theatre – Queensland Performing Arts Centre (QPAC), South Brisbane Get Tickets
Hollywood’s ultimate romantic comedy comes to life in this dazzling theatrical adaptation. Follow the iconic story of Vivian and Edward, set to a rocking new score by Bryan Adams and Jim Vallance.
BLANC DE BLANC ENCORE
22 October 2025 – February 2026 | The West End Electric, West End Get Tickets
Prepare for a night of high-class cabaret and breathtaking acrobatics in this champagne-soaked spectacle. This show combines vintage glamour with exhilarating circus feats for a truly decadent night out.
1984 by George Orwell Adapted by Shake & Stir
Until 9 November 2025 | Playhouse, Queensland Performing Arts Centre (QPAC), South Brisbane Get Tickets
Shake & Stir’s gripping adaptation of George Orwell’s dystopian masterpiece returns to the stage. This confronting and critically acclaimed production is a must-see theatrical event.
In the Mood for Maggie Cheung
24 October – 30 November 2025 | Gallery of Modern Art (GOMA), South Brisbane Get Tickets
This film program celebrates the captivating career of international superstar Maggie Cheung. Experience her most iconic roles and cinematic collaborations on the big screen at GOMA.
Shimmer: An Artist in Residence project by Gerwyn Davies
18 October – 8 March 2025 | Fairfax Gallery – Museum of Brisbane, Brisbane City Get Tickets
Explore the fantastical world of artist Gerwyn Davies in this colourful and vibrant exhibition. ‘Shimmer’ showcases elaborate costumes and photography that challenge identity and form.
The Greatest Show Choir
9 November 2025 | Concert Hall, Queensland Performing Arts Centre (QPAC), South Brisbane Get Tickets
Enjoy an uplifting performance as The Greatest Show Choir fills the QPAC Concert Hall with stunning harmonies. This mass choir event features spectacular voices celebrating the joy of song.
9 November 2025 | The Old Museum — Concert Hall, Bowen Hills Get Tickets
The Brisbane Symphony Orchestra presents a captivating concert exploring themes of ‘Regency & Reformation’. Experience a powerful orchestral performance in the beautiful setting of The Old Museum.
1000 Voices
9 November 2025 | South Bank Piazza, South Brisbane Get Tickets
Be part of a massive musical event as 1000 voices join together in song at the South Bank Piazza. This inspiring community performance is set to be a powerful and memorable experience.
Japanese Film Festival 2025
6 November – 19 December 2025 | Palace Barracks, Petrie Terrace Get Tickets
Immerse yourself in the best of Japanese cinema with a diverse program of contemporary films. The festival showcases a wide range of genres, from drama and anime to comedy.
The Queensland Cabaret Festival
7 – 9 November 2025 | The Old Museum, Bowen Hills Get Tickets
Experience the glitz and glamour of the Queensland Cabaret Festival at The Old Museum. This multi-day event features a stellar lineup of local and national cabaret artists.
Whitefella Yella Tree
23 October – 8 November 2025 | La Boite Theatre, Kelvin Grove Get Tickets
This powerful and poetic new Australian play explores a story of love and identity set in the 19th century. Don’t miss this compelling piece of theatre at La Boite.
Shirley Valentine
29 October – 8 November 2025 | Twelfth Night Theatre, Bowen Hills Get Tickets
Enjoy the heartwarming and hilarious story of Shirley Valentine, a Liverpool housewife who rediscovers herself. This celebrated one-woman play is a delightful night at the theatre.
‘Everyone’s Amazing’ | Steve Lopes
21 October – 15 November 2025 | Mitchell Fine Art, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
Explore the latest exhibition by artist Steve Lopes, showcasing his unique perspective on contemporary life. This collection at Mitchell Fine Art offers a compelling visual narrative.
‘Tjukurrpa’ | Shorty Jangala Robertson
21 October – 15 November 2025 | Mitchell Fine Art, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
Discover the powerful ancestral stories captured in the work of Shorty Jangala Robertson. This exhibition provides a vibrant look into Indigenous culture and Dreaming (Tjukurrpa).
Monica Rohan | Visitors
28 October – 15 November 2025 | Jan Murphy Gallery, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
Step into the intricate and detailed world of Monica Rohan’s latest exhibition, ‘Visitors’. Her distinctive paintings explore themes of self and environment in stunning detail.
Beethoven – Mass in C
7 November 2025 | The Old Museum — Concert Hall, Bowen Hills Get Tickets
Experience the sublime power of Beethoven’s Mass in C, performed in the historic Concert Hall. This is a wonderful opportunity to hear a choral masterpiece come to life.
Candlelight Ballet: Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake & More
7 November 2025 | St John’s Cathedral, Brisbane City Get Tickets
Experience the magic of ballet classics illuminated by thousands of candles in the stunning St John’s Cathedral. This enchanting evening features highlights from Tchaikovsky’s most beloved works.
Candlelight: Rings & Dragons
8 November 2025 | St John’s Cathedral, Brisbane City Get Tickets
Journey to epic fantasy worlds with this unique candlelight concert featuring music from ‘Lord of the Rings’ and ‘Game of Thrones’. Hear the iconic themes performed in a breathtaking cathedral setting.
Candlelight: Tribute to Phil Collins
8 November 2025 | St John’s Cathedral, Brisbane City Get Tickets
Pay tribute to a music legend in this special candlelight concert dedicated to the hits of Phil Collins. Enjoy his classic songs performed by talented musicians in an intimate, candlelit atmosphere.
Finding Our Voice – Back Stage with Women in Voice
9 November 2025 | The Old Museum, Bowen Hills Get Tickets
Go behind the scenes with the iconic ‘Women in Voice’ series as part of the Queensland Cabaret Festival. This special event offers an intimate look at the stories and songs from the celebrated performers.
La Traviata – Opéra national de Paris
9 November 2S025 | Dendy Powerhouse – Outdoor Cinema, New Farm Get Tickets
Enjoy a stunning production of Verdi’s ‘La Traviata’ from the Opéra national de Paris, screened at the Dendy Powerhouse outdoor cinema. Pack a picnic for a magnificent night of opera under the stars.
Kyle Watson’s Jazz Warriors
7 November 2025 | JMI Live, Bowen Hills Get Tickets
Catch Kyle Watson’s Jazz Warriors as they take the stage at JMI Live for a night of dynamic jazz. This performance will showcase the incredible talent of these emerging musicians.
Soultown
7 November 2025 | Brisbane Jazz Club, Kangaroo Point Get Tickets
Get ready to groove with Soultown at the Brisbane Jazz Club. This band will deliver a high-energy performance packed with soul, funk, and R&B classics.
Dezzie D and the Stingrayz
8 November 2025 | Brisbane Jazz Club, Kangaroo Point Get Tickets
Enjoy a night of soulful tunes and high-energy entertainment with Dezzie D and the Stingrayz. This popular band brings their signature blend of soul, ska, and jazz to the Brisbane Jazz Club.
Valtozash
9 November 2025 | Brisbane Jazz Club, Kangaroo Point Get Tickets
Experience the innovative sounds of Valtozash live at the Brisbane Jazz Club. This performance promises a dynamic fusion of jazz styles for an exciting evening of music.
This is just a selection of the fantastic events happening across Brisbane. Be sure to book your tickets early, as many of these shows are likely to sell out. Get out and enjoy the vibrant culture and entertainment the city has to offer this November.
Whether you are looking to explore pop culture, enjoy immersive art, or find free family-friendly activities, Brisbane is buzzing with major events this weekend. From sprawling conventions and culinary festivals to interactive exhibitions and park activities, there is truly something for everyone to discover. Here is a look at what is happening across the city from 7 to 9 November.
Santa’s Parade
8 November 2025 | Indooroopilly Shopping Centre Details Here
Indooroopilly is set to come alive with festive spirit this weekend as Santa and Mrs Claus lead the much-loved Christmas parade through Indooroopilly Shopping Centre, officially marking the start of the holiday season in Brisbane’s west.
Supanova 2025
7 – 9 November 2025 | Brisbane Convention & Exhibition Centre, South Brisbane Get Tickets
Supanova is Brisbane’s premier comic con and gaming convention, bringing pop culture to the city. This year’s event introduces “Level Up” on Friday, a special program offering students access to industry leaders, tech seminars, and insights into gaming careers.
Bluey’s World
7 November 2024 – 15 March 2026 | Northshore Pavilion, Hamilton Get Tickets
Step into the real-life world of Bluey in this massive 4,000-square-metre immersive experience at Northshore Pavilion. Visitors can explore a full-scale recreation of the Heeler family home, including the living room, kitchen, and backyard, complete with interactive play and soundscapes.
Night Feast
15 October – 9 November 2025 | Brisbane Powerhouse, New Farm Get Tickets
This month-long sensory celebration transforms the Brisbane Powerhouse into a village of feasting and art. A selection of Brisbane’s top chefs will present exclusive dishes, paired with a menu of immersive art interventions, light installations, and performance.
Christmas Putt Putt at Victoria Park
7 November 2025 – 4 January 2026 | Victoria Park, Herston Get Tickets
Victoria Park’s iconic course is transformed into an enchanting Christmas wonderland, decked out with bells, bows, and bright twinkling lights. Players can putt their way through festive fairways, sleigh alongside Santa, and try for a ho-ho-ho-hole in one.
19th Annual 4MBS Brisbane Shakespeare Festival
8 – 9 November 2025 | Roma Street Parkland, Brisbane City Get Tickets
The 19th annual festival brings the Bard to Roma Street Parkland for a weekend of culture and performance. This year’s event features a professional production of “Twelfth Night,” alongside demonstrations of swordplay, Shakespearean dance workshops, and language talks.
Art Box for Kids Lincoln Austin
8 November 2025 – 10 May 2026 | Gallery of Modern Art (GOMA), South Brisbane Get Tickets
This exhibition at GOMA invites children to discover the work of Australian artist Lincoln Austin, who explores perception and optical illusions. Kids can see his work and then explore their own creativity with a fun, hands-on “Al-foil drawing” activity.
Play Date (MELT FESTIVAL)
9 November 2025 | Powerhouse Theatre, Brisbane Powerhouse, New Farm Get Tickets
Part of MELT Festival, this event is the ultimate day-doof disco for children aged two to seven and their families. Pop duo Turtle and Sugar Rush lead a colourful adventure of original songs and stories celebrating identity, body positivity, and the power of imagination.
Micro Museum
7 – 9 November 2025 | Museum of Brisbane, Brisbane City Get Tickets
This interactive space at the Museum of Brisbane invites you to become the curator and tell stories through objects. Visitors can explore the fascinating world of collecting by selecting, sorting, and arranging a wide array of vintage and second-hand items.
Little Artist’s Eye Spy
7 – 9 November 2025 | Museum of Brisbane, Brisbane City Get Tickets
Transform your Museum of Brisbane visit into an exciting game with this free activity sheet for kids. This playful experience encourages young visitors to polish their peepers and discover details in the art and history exhibitions they might otherwise have missed.
Clock Tower Tour
7 – 9 November 2025 | Museum of Brisbane, Brisbane City Get Tickets
Take a free, 15-minute guided tour up Brisbane’s historic City Hall Clock Tower. Visitors will ride in the original 1930s cage lift to the observation platform for a unique view of the city and a look at the clock’s mechanism.
Created with Colour Art Exhibition
7 – 9 November 2025 | Richard Randall Art Studio, Toowong Get Tickets
This local art exhibition showcases a vibrant collection of works at the historic Richard Randall Art Studio. Visitors can explore pieces from local artists, all centered around the theme of colour and expression, within the beautiful heritage-listed space.
Children’s storytime in the park – Dorrington Park, Ashgrove
7 November 2025 | Dorrington Park, Ashgrove Get Tickets
Experience the magic of storytime with this free ‘First 5 Forever’ session at Dorrington Park. This interactive pop-up library event includes stories, songs, and rhymes, ideal for children from birth to five years and their parents or carers.
Tween STEAM
7 November 2025 | Fairfield Library, Fairfield Get Tickets
This library session is designed specifically for tweens, offering hands-on activities focused on Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, and Mathematics. It’s a great opportunity for kids to get creative, solve problems, and explore new concepts in a fun environment.
First 5 Forever STEAM storytime
7 – 9 November 2025 | Sunnybank Hills Library, Sunnybank Hills Get Tickets
This interactive session combines the fun of storytime with the principles of STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, and Mathematics). Designed for children up to five years old, the program uses songs, stories, and rhymes to develop early learning and literacy skills.
Green waste tales
7 – 9 November 2025 | Dorrington Park, Ashgrove Get Tickets
Join this engaging and educational session in the park to learn all about green waste and recycling. “Green waste tales” is a fun, story-based presentation that teaches children the importance of composting and caring for the environment.
This is just a selection of the many events happening, so be sure to check ticket availability and opening times before you head out. With so much variety on offer, it is a fantastic weekend to explore new parts of the city and enjoy the vibrant cultural landscape of Brisbane.
The first full weekend of November is packed with an incredible variety of live entertainment across Brisbane. From major international music tours and orchestral extravaganzas to intimate comedy sets and unique storytelling events, there is truly something for everyone. Whether you are looking to rock out at The Fortitude Music Hall, experience the magic of ABBA at QPAC, or discover a new favourite comedian, this weekend is the perfect time to get out and enjoy the city’s vibrant live scene.
Daniel Johns In Conversation: What If The Future Never Happened?
9 November 2025 | The Fortitude Music Hall, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
This is a unique night of storytelling, film, and music with one of Australia’s most decorated artists. The evening will feature a screening of his featurette, “What If The Future Never Happened?”, framed by an onstage conversation where Daniel will share unreleased recordings and unseen footage.
FERNANDO The Music of ABBA Orchestrated
8 November 2025 | Concert Hall, Queensland Performing Arts Centre (QPAC), South Brisbane Get Tickets
This is a large-scale celebration of ABBA’s greatest hits, backed by the Southern Cross Symphony and a world-class band. The concert features four of Australia’s top vocalists performing classics like “Dancing Queen” and “Waterloo” in an epic orchestral setting.
THE LIVING END | I ONLY TRUST ROCK N ROLL TOUR 2025
8 November 2025 | The Fortitude Music Hall, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
The band is touring their first new album in eight years, “I Only Trust Rock n Roll”. The show will feature two sets: one with new tracks and classic hits, and a second set playing their iconic self-titled debut album in its entirety.
CLAP YOUR HANDS SAY YEAH | 20-year anniversary tour
8 November 2025 | The Triffid, Newstead Get Tickets
The iconic indie rock act is celebrating the 20th-anniversary of their landmark self-titled debut album. Founder and frontman Alec Ounsworth will perform the entire album live, along with other surprises from their catalogue.
The Road to BossaNovaVille and The Very Best of Bacharach
7 November 2025 | The Old Museum, Bowen Hills Get Tickets
This is a special double bill event featuring two distinct musical tributes. The View From Madeleine’s Couch will perform “The Road to BossaNovaVille” with classic 1960s Brazilian vibes, followed by Bacharacharama performing the lush and smooth hits of Burt Bacharach.
Jimmy Rees
7 November 2025 | The Fortitude Music Hall, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
Australian entertainer Jimmy Rees is bringing his brand-new “In Reel Life” tour to Brisbane. Following several sold-out runs, this new show continues to blend his unique brand of comedy and observations that have gained him over 4 million social media followers.
MUSIC4MATES25 | A music benefit supporting Veterans
9 November 2025 | The Triffid, Newstead Get Tickets
This is a special music benefit event held to support and raise funds for veterans. The event highlights the power of music in helping veterans heal, connect, and process their experiences while raising awareness for the cause.
Christmas Double Feature
7 – 8 November 2025 | The Sit Down Comedy Club, Paddington Get Tickets
Get into the holiday spirit early with a special Christmas-themed comedy event. This double feature at the iconic Sit Down Comedy Club promises a night full of laughter and festive cheer from two headline comedians.
Evan Honer | Everything I Wanted – AU/NZ Tour
7 November 2025 | The Brightside, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
Independent folk-Americana artist Evan Honer brings his “Everything I Wanted” tour to Australia. The viral sensation, known for his blend of acoustic folk and indie pop, will perform his original music that has amassed over 500 million streams.
No Fun At All (Sweden) 2025 Australian Tour
7 November 2025 | Crowbar Brisbane, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
Swedish punk powerhouse No Fun At All is returning to Australia for a high-energy tour. As huge favourites in the country, these masters of melody and mayhem are set to deliver a show that is not to be missed.
The VANNS
8 November 2025 | The Princess Theatre, Woolloongabba Get Tickets
Australian indie-rock band The VANNS are set to perform at The Princess Theatre. They will be supported by special guests Mid Drift & Nana’s Pie for a big night of live music.
This event at Arcana promises an intimate evening celebrating local and diverse musical talents. “From the Roots to the City” suggests a journey through different genres, from traditional sounds to modern urban beats.
Nikki Britton | A Work In Progress
8 November 2025 | Good Chat Comedy Club, Petrie Terrace Get Tickets
Comedian Nikki Britton is bringing a new “Work In Progress” show to the Good Chat Comedy Club. Known as a “joy bomb,” Britton will be testing out new material, sharing her sharp wit and chaotic life stories.
John Cruckshank | Live
8 November 2025 | Good Chat Comedy Club, Petrie Terrace Get Tickets
See comedian John Cruckshank perform his unique, laconic style of stand-up live. Celebrated for his viral “Redfern Electrical” universe, his live show blends his “tradie” persona and larrikin lingo with sharp observations.
Grent Perez – backflips in a restaurant tour
9 November 2025 | The Tivoli, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
Viral music sensation Grent Perez brings his “backflips in a restaurant tour” to The Tivoli. The show captures the candid energy and humour seen in his recent tour documentary, featuring live performances of his popular tracks.
With such a varied and high-calibre lineup, it is shaping up to be a memorable weekend for live entertainment in Brisbane. Be sure to check ticket availability in advance, as many of these events are likely to sell out. Whatever your taste in music or comedy, the city has something to offer.
It was the kind of Sunday that only Macca could conjure — a cross-country chorus of voices stitched together by warmth, wit and the occasional weather report. From the Hay Plain to the Swan Valley, from Eden’s rain-washed shore to a humming beehive in Camberwell, the calls rolled in like postcards from every corner of the continent. What unfolded was a chatty, generous conversation about the roads we travel, the work we love and the country we share.
From Bundaberg to Bunbury — Jason’s Long Drive
Somewhere along the wide hush of the Hay Plain, Jason rang in from the cab of his ute. He and his wife were driving from Bundaberg all the way to Bunbury, chasing down an old F-Series Ford. He laughed that he could never afford a new one, so he buys “a cheap old one and brings it back to life — no black boxes or sensors, just a 351 Clevo and call it good.” Macca pictured the long haul across Balranald and Iron Knob, warning about roos on dusk, while Jason talked about the pleasure of doing something with your own hands. “You can see what you’ve built,” he said, “and it’ll probably outlast the new ones.”
David from Cropper Creek — Harvest Season
Up on the border between Moree and Goondiwindi, David was on the header cutting barley when he took a quick call. He reckoned they were “getting sevens a hectare” — a good year — and told Macca he’d just traded up to a 2005 Kenworth SAR. Back home in Rochester, he said, things were drier and windswept. “It’s patchy, mate. One side of the fence looks alright; the other’s burnt off.” Macca chuckled, “That’s Australia for you,” and David agreed, the hum of the harvester steady in the background.
Shelley at Marom Creek — Accidental Brahmans and a Lost Wetland
Near Lismore, Shelley and her husband were living proof that sometimes the land has plans of its own. When they bought a run-down 50-acre block at Marom Creek, they inherited a few straggly cattle from a deceased estate. “Turns out they were pure-bred Brahmans,” she told Macca, amused. “We’d become stud owners without even knowing it.” What started as a fluke turned into a passion for soil health and regeneration. She wished more city folk understood what life on the land demands. “Everyone should spend a year or two out here — then they’d get it.”
The chat turned to Tuckean Swamp, once a world-class wetland now drained away. “It’s tragic,” Shelley sighed. “We’re trying to restore it before we expire.” Macca promised to look it up; you could hear the admiration in his voice.
Sandra in Eden — CWA Gardens and Grateful Rain
On the far south coast, Sandra called from Eden, rain pattering on her jacket as she threw a ball for her kelpie. “Haven’t had rain for months,” she said, delighted. Between throws she mentioned the CWA Open Garden day coming up on 2 November — six gardens, ten bucks entry and, of course, scones and tea at the hall. “Small communities are incredible,” she said. “We all pull together — that’s what it’s about.”
Dez from Panania — Punting, Phone Boxes and the Old Days
From Panania, Dez rang in full of mischief. The chat turned to betting, sparked by The Punt Song, and he remembered his dad phoning in wagers from the red phone boxes of the sixties. “He’d push the A-button and say the code word — Lucky — before the operator cut him off,” he laughed. These days he’s part of Ciaron Maher Racing, but the romance of the old days sticks. “It was community, really,” he said. “And Macca, your show’s the only one left that feels like that.”
Tim on the Bourke Road — McDonald’s and Memories
Half an hour out of Bourke, Tim was trying to pick up the ABC while harvesting wheat and chickpeas. “Reception’s dodgy,” he grinned, “but I bribe the kids. They could have McDonald’s if I got to listen to you.” The kids are grown now, but he reckons they still tune in. “It’s part of the weekend.” Macca laughed — he’s heard that deal before.
Keith the Beeman — Where Have All the Bees Gone?
Regular caller Keith had bee news from Bilpin, saying the poor apple crops weren’t from Varroa mite at all. “The bees are busy in the gums,” he said, “why bother with a few apple trees when there’s thousands of blossoms next door?” He suggested backyarders keep native stingless bees, which stay put and “don’t sting the neighbours.” Macca loved it — practical and poetic, like most of Keith’s calls.
Helen Jane in Camberwell — Backyard Honey and Blue-banded Bees
In Camberwell, Helen Jane reminisced about the hives she once kept in her city backyard. “Ten kilos of honey a year and the garden looked incredible,” she said. Downsized now, she plans to try native bees. Before hanging up she mentioned she’s off to Kangaroo Island soon — “to swim with wild dolphins.” Macca wished her good weather for it.
Bruce Rocks Out — Suzi Quatro at Rooty Hill RSL
Bruce, also 75, was still buzzing from Suzi Quatro’s concert at Rooty Hill RSL. “She’s seventy-five too,” he told Macca, “and still rocks like she’s thirty.” They laughed about how many times she’s toured here — more than forty visits — and agreed that Australia must feel like her second home.
Charlie Orr — Winchelsea’s Home-Grown Village
From Winchelsea, Charlie Orr told one of those stories that makes you proud to live in a small town. Locals wanted older residents to stay close, so they built ten independent-living units themselves, with help from the Surf Coast Shire, Lions Club, Hesse Rural Health and the local Community Bank. “A retired architect designed them,” Charlie said, “nine-star energy rating and everything.” The project frees up family homes and keeps the town’s heart beating. “We just got on with it,” he added. Macca called it a blueprint for everywhere.
Wren in Townsville — Heavy Lifts and Light Skies
Far north in Townsville, Wren was on the docks unloading a heavy-lift ship. “Bit of everything,” he said. “Wind-farm gear, ADF stuff, sometimes aid shipments.” He also runs a crane business, a children’s brain-cancer charity and somehow finds time to fly planes. “It’s about pride in the job,” he told Macca. “You finish the day and know you’ve done something solid.” He’s even catching Suzi Quatro when she hits town next month.
Raoul at the Perth Show — Seeing Australia Through the Radio
At the Perth Royal Show, Macca met Raoul, a support worker originally from India, accompanying his vision-impaired client. “Every Sunday we drive through the Swan Valley with you on the radio,” he said. “You take us around the country.” He spoke fondly of Perth, where “you can live in the bush and still be twenty minutes from the city.”
Chris Greaves — Across the Desert in a Land Cruiser
Chris Greaves was mid-journey in his classic FJ45 Land Cruiser, driving from Perth to Caboolture for a vintage meet. He’d dropped by Macca’s Noosa broadcast earlier in the year and was now looping back via Canberra to collect his wife, who’d just medalled at the Masters Games. “We’ll probably swing by the Gunbarrel Highway and the Lambert Centre on the way home,” he said. He works with Chevron on Barrow Island, where, as he put it, “it’s barren, hot and full of snakes — but beautiful in its own way.”
Angus Gill — From Nashville with Heart
When Angus Gill stepped into the studio with his mum Tanya, Macca grinned like he was greeting family. The singer-songwriter had just returned from Nashville, where he’d been recording with Michael McDonald of the Doobie Brothers. He’s also written a novella, Departure and Arrival, drawn from his grandmother’s Alzheimer’s journey. “Dementia Australia helps over four hundred thousand people,” he said, giving out their helpline — 1800 100 500 — before playing a re-imagined version of his song Freckles.
Jock Schmishen — From the Poles to Outer Space
From Adelaide, explorer Jock Schmishen had an extraordinary yarn about Eric Phillips, the polar adventurer who’s now been to space. Phillips joined crypto-entrepreneur Chung Wa’s private SpaceX Dragon flight, orbiting over both poles — making him the first person to have reached the North Pole, South Pole and space under the Australian flag. Jock’s next expedition will lead the Royal Geographical Society through the Flinders Ranges and Lake Eyre. “Just keeping my boots dusty,” he joked, and Macca roared with laughter.
Kel from Ocean Shores — Making Things That Last
To close the morning, Kel from Ocean Shores rang in about her small business, Coastal Clotheslines, making stainless-steel, plastic-free lines built to last decades. “We survived the wet years,” she said, “and people are over rubbish — they want quality again.” She added with a grin that turning socks the right way before hanging them “saves nine years of life.” Macca loved that one, promising to quote her forever.
Closing
After a morning that wandered from the Hay Plain to outer space, Macca signed off in his usual way: if you see him on the road, stop and say g’day. Another Sunday stitched together, another reminder that the heart of Australia still beats strongest on the open line.
Disclaimer: ‘Australia All Over’ is a program produced and broadcast by the ABC Local Radio Network and hosted by Ian McNamara. Brisbane Suburbs Online News has no affiliation with Ian McNamara, the ABC, or the ‘Australia All Over’ program. This weekly review is an independent summary based on publicly available podcast transcripts and episodes. All original content and recordings remain the property of the ABC. Our summaries are written in our own words and are intended for commentary and review purposes only. Readers can listen to the full episodes via the official ABC platforms.
The latest selection of films arriving in cinemas offers something for every taste, from major new releases and anticipated thrillers to special event screenings. This week sees the launch of highly awaited titles like Bugonia and Quezon, family-friendly adventures, and a sing-along event. GOMA also begins a special retrospective series, providing a rare chance to see classic Hong Kong cinema on the big screen.
Showing from 30 October 2025
A PAW Patrol Christmas
When Santa Claus gets sick, Rubble must step in to save Christmas, all while fending off Mayor Humdinger’s plan to steal all the presents. IMDb Rating: N/A Cinemas: Event Cinemas, Limelight Cinemas, Cinebar Rosalie Village, United Cinemas Eldorado, Angelika Cinemas – Woolloongabba, Reading Cinemas, Cineplex, Bayside Cinemas – Wynnum, Five Star Cinemas, HOYTS Watch
Bat Out of Hell – The Musical
A filmed version of Jim Steinman’s epic rock musical, this story is a post-apocalyptic retelling of Peter Pan, following Strat, the forever-young leader of ‘The Lost’, who falls in love with the daughter of a tyrannical ruler. IMDb Rating: N/A Cinemas: Event Cinemas, Limelight Cinemas, Dendy Cinemas, United Cinemas Eldorado Watch
Bugonia
From director Yorgos Lanthimos, this dark comedy follows two conspiracy-obsessed young men (Jesse Plemons, Aidan Delbis) who kidnap the powerful CEO of a major company (Emma Stone), convinced she is an alien intent on destroying Earth. IMDb Rating: N/A Cinemas: Event Cinemas, Limelight Cinemas, Palace James St Cinema, Palace Barracks Brisbane, Cinebar Rosalie Village, Dendy Cinemas, Angelika Cinemas – Woolloongabba, Reading Cinemas, Cineplex, Bayside Cinemas – Wynnum, Five Star Cinemas, HOYTS, United Cinemas Eldorado Watch
Good Fortune
Directed by and starring Aziz Ansari, this comedy follows a struggling man (Ansari) whose life is swapped with that of a wealthy venture capitalist (Seth Rogen) by a well-intentional but bumbling angel (Keanu Reeves). IMDb Rating: N/A Cinemas: Event Cinemas, Limelight Cinemas, Palace James St Cinema, Cinebar Rosalie Village, United Cinemas Eldorado, Dendy Cinemas, Angelika Cinemas – Woolloongabba, Reading Cinemas, Cineplex, Bayside Cinemas – Wynnum, Five Star Cinemas, HOYTS Watch
Kiss of the Spider Woman
In a prison cell, a political prisoner and his cellmate form an unlikely bond as one recounts the plot of a glamorous Hollywood musical, which unfolds as a lush fantasy sequence starring Jennifer Lopez. IMDb Rating: 5.1/10 Cinemas: Event Cinemas, Palace James St Cinema, Palace Barracks Brisbane, Cineplex, HOYTS, United Cinemas Eldorado, Five Star Cinemas Watch
Shell
This LA-set horror film follows an insecure actress (Elisabeth Moss) who is seduced by a revolutionary beauty procedure from a wellness CEO (Kate Hudson), only to discover it has horrifying, crustaceous side effects. IMDb Rating: N/A Cinemas: Event Cinemas, Palace James St Cinema, Cinebar Rosalie Village, United Cinemas Eldorado, Cineplex Watch
Quezon
The third and final instalment of the Filipino historical ‘Bayaniverse’ trilogy, this film chronicles the complex political rise of Philippine President Manuel L. Quezon (Jericho Rosales), detailing his compromises and enduring legacy. IMDb Rating: N/A Cinemas: Event Cinemas, HOYTS Watch
Showing from 31 October 2025
K-Pop Demon Hunters Sing-Along
A special Halloween sing-along event. When they are not selling out stadiums, a group of K-pop superstars live secret double lives as a team of badass demon hunters. IMDb Rating: N/A Cinemas: Limelight Cinemas, Palace Barracks Brisbane, Cinebar Rosalie Village, United Cinemas Eldorado, Dendy Cinemas, Angelika Cinemas – Woolloongabba, Reading Cinemas, Five Star Cinemas, HOYTS Watch
Showing from 1 November 2025
Centre Stage (1991)
This unconventional 1991 biopic by Stanley Kwan stars Maggie Cheung in a defining role as Ruan Lingyu, the “Greta Garbo of China,” a silent film star whose tragic private life began to mirror the melodramas that made her famous. IMDb Rating: 7.4/10 Cinemas: GOMA Watch
Song of the Exile (1990)
Directed by Ann Hui, this 1990 drama stars Maggie Cheung as a young woman who returns to Hong Kong after graduating from university in London. Upon her return, she must confront the deep cultural divide between herself and her Japanese mother. IMDb Rating: 7.8/10 Cinemas: GOMA Watch
The Twilight Saga Marathon
A special marathon event screening all films from The Twilight Saga back-to-back, giving fans a chance to relive the entire epic vampire romance on the big screen. IMDb Rating: N/A Cinemas: Event Cinemas, Limelight Cinemas, Angelika Cinemas – Woolloongabba, Reading Cinemas Watch
Showing from 2 November 2025
Green Snake (1993)
A 1993 fantasy classic from director Tsui Hark. Two snake spirits (Maggie Cheung and Joey Wong) take on human form. Still, their relationship is tested when one falls in love with a mortal man and the other struggles to comprehend human sensuality. IMDb Rating: 7.0/10 Cinemas: GOMA Watch
Hero (2002)
Zhang Yimou’s wuxia epic stars Jet Li as a prefect who recounts to the King of Qin how he defeated three legendary assassins. Each part of his story is told in a distinct and visually stunning colour-coded narrative. IMDb Rating: 7.9/10 Cinemas: GOMA Watch
Annie Hall (1977)
The classic 1977 romantic comedy starring and directed by Woody Allen. Neurotic New York comedian Alvy Singer meticulously analyzes the rise and fall of his relationship with the eponymous and quirky Annie Hall (Diane Keaton). IMDb Rating: 8.0/10 Cinemas: Palace James St Cinema, Palace Barracks Brisbane, Dendy Cinemas Watch
Showing from 5 November 2025
Days of Being Wild (1990)
Wong Kar-Wai’s 1990 drama features an all-star cast including Leslie Cheung, Andy Lau, and Maggie Cheung. The film follows a disillusioned and charismatic playboy in 1960s Hong Kong as he searches for his birth mother. IMDb Rating: 7.5/10 Cinemas: GOMA Watch
Whether you are looking for a major blockbuster, a family outing, or a classic film screening, the wide array of new and special releases provides plenty of options for a trip to the cinema over the coming week.