News Articles
The 'AI psychosis' starts with a chatbot conversation
By James Purtill
New research on AI psychosis shows how chatbots can make delusional thinking worse and pull users into dangerous emotional worlds
Who pays for burnout?
By Brigid Delaney
Burnout is common, but who is responsible for it?
Last drinks at the local pub?
By Alexandra Carlton
Australian local pubs are changing hands quickly, what happens to the communities that built them?
The grave adopters
By Rob O'Brien
In The Netherlands, people have been honoring young soldiers buried far from home for 80 years
The perfect mother myth
By Cynthia Banham
I learned the truth about my great-grandmother and it changed how I understand maternal love
I thought I understood China, then I had a craft beer
By Wing Kuang
China's Gen Z is rejecting corporate jobs, and craft beer is a symbol of economic change
Are Australian universities losing international students?
By Damien Cave
Australian universities are losing appeal due to rising costs and falling satisfaction
The apartment experiment
By Rhiannon Stevens
My family is trying apartment living to see if it's a good alternative to a house
A journey into my family's past taught me to focus on the present
By Annie Louey
Genealogy can be addictive, but it can also change your life
'They saved my life': Bikers help abused kids feel safe
By Julia Baird
Bikers are helping abused kids by accompanying them to court and standing guard outside their homes
Face down and bloody, his death was labeled 'pneumonia'
By Anne Connolly
A man's death in aged care was labeled 'pneumonia', but his family is seeking the truth
I'm not sure about arranged marriage
By Prianka Srinivasan
I'm exploring the Indian arranged marriage system in Australia
Inside the fight against vaccine hesitancy
By Hayley Gleeson
Addressing vaccine hesitancy requires skill and patience
Should Australia do DNA tests on all newborns?
By Gary Nunn
Newborn genomic testing raises questions about what we should know about our health
By James Purtill
The backyard sprinkler is on the climate change frontline
Billions of liters of water are used for household gardens, but water is running low
Wrestling with risks and fear of shark bites
By Julia Baird
As an ocean swimmer, I've learned to accept the risk of shark bites
The hope ship
By Jody Ray
Australian volunteers are providing life-changing healthcare on the world's largest civilian hospital ship
The girl who disappeared from her bed
By Maddison Connaughton
A schoolgirl disappeared 50 years ago, and new leads may solve the case
The vibe shift is here
By Brigid Delaney
This moment is both paralyzing and invigorating, full of risk and possibility
The darkest week, the search for light
By Maddison Connaughton
The Jewish community is questioning what to do after a recent attack
The struggle for Israel
By Matt Doran
Benjamin Netanyahu's opponents say he is an enemy of the state, while his supporters say he is all Israel has
America's war on pregnant women
By Gina Rushton
In post-Roe America, prosecutors have launched over 400 cases against people for crimes related to their pregnancies
Equestrian sport faces a reckoning
By Rhiannon Stevens
Questions about horse welfare are growing, and equestrian sport's Olympic dream may be at risk
The childcare dilemma
By Kellie Scott
The childcare system is meant to support working parents, but it's becoming a source of fear
The landline is having a moment
By Rhiannon Stevens
Parents are reinstalling landlines to restore patience and connection in their children
The quiet coup
By Maani Truu
The inside story of Gough Whitlam's dramatic dismissal in 1975
How social media algorithms decide who you are
By Prianka Srinivasan
I used a burner phone and fake name to learn how Instagram's algorithm works
The rebirth of deathcare
By Ginger Gorman
Voluntary assisted dying has become a symbol of control over how life ends, but dying well is about more than just the final hours
Lawyers are already using AI, will judges be next?
By Gina Rushton
Artificial intelligence is coming to the law, but are we ready for robots to become judge and jury?
The case against babies
By Bri Lee
Elon Musk believes the collapsing birth rate is humanity's biggest danger, but antinatalists argue having kids is a procreational Ponzi scheme
'I do not consent': How pseudolaw supports 'sovcit' ideas
By Ariel Bogle and Cam Wilson
Sovereign citizens believe Australian laws do not apply to them, and pseudolaw is used to support this idea
The F***king love of the game
By Rhiannon Stevens
AFLW arrived in 2017 and changed Australian rules football forever
It's the summer of Trump and the world can't look away
By Nick Bryant
Returning to the US, I found a country that didn't want to talk about politics despite being in the eye of the Trump storm
The vape dilemma
By Jenny Valentish
Inside the world of vaping, where influencers, big tobacco, and the black market stare down vape reforms and users hunting for a fix
YIMBYs vs NIMBYs in the battle for your backyard
By Gina Rushton
The Yes In My Backyard movement is lobbying for denser cities and more housing, but NIMBYs are resisting
I watched my mum succumb to dementia, will it come for me too?
By Jane Hutcheon
After witnessing my mum's cognitive decline, I wonder if I'll be among those affected by dementia
By Gary Nunn
The horror of being in an IVF mix-up
Some of Australia's largest IVF clinics have passed inaccurate information about children born from sperm donations to their male donors
By Annie Louey
The burnt-out Millennials who walked away from work
With burnout at unprecedented levels, who doesn't dream of stepping away from it all and embracing a career break?
By Rhiannon Stevens
Can Wikipedia survive the rise of AI and Trump?
In an age of polarization and AI, the free online encyclopedia might be more important than you think
By Judith Brett
Meet the woman who turned female votes into political dynamite
By Catherine Taylor
Inside the hunt for the flu virus with pandemic potential
Since 1959, the avian flu virus H5N1 has been popping up around the globe, and scientists believe it could spark the next pandemic
By Gina Rushton
How checking facts got political
Fact-checking has been described as cleaning up a sewage spill with a teaspoon, what happens to truth when someone takes the teaspoon away?
Saturday, July 19, 2025, at 5:23 pm
Tuesday, May 19, 2026, at 4:20 pm
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