Frankston Times 8 March 2022

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Frankston

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Your week

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An indepe aper cover ndent voi ing Frank ston, Frank ce

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ston South

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n Artworks

Artists see the bigger pic ture

A GROU P begin workinof street artists will for this monthg in Frankston soon ’s Big Picture on murals Camilo Delgado (pictured) Fest. this year after whale titled assisting on will return a See story The Messenger mural of a page 5 Picture last year. : Supplied

facility for Oliv er’s Hil l-

will make a big impression

because of from the a lack of financ A BOAT ial suppor state and ments. facility t federal not be built at Oliver govern- in particular the Mr Edbro crown, Franks jewel in Frankston by the state ’s Hill will oke says the Franks govern MP The recent Paul Edbrooke ment, “anyfishing and boatinthat he has told our communityton Beach. I agree ton’s resenti says. ng the g minist release option that any with could risk ing Victor of Better of a facility to commence er that the unanticipatedproject which This decision Frankston comm Boattion plan ia’s recreational amazing unity. with many was made Frankston at Oliver ’s Hill planning terfron change Franks consultation after meetin to build sparked fears that boating accomm Council’s based on t, our largestton Beach and s to reflects not to procee a previous the majori unity members g and facility with locals, Hill had boating facility a proposal tourist attractwa- you work is and the iconic user groups and boat ty opinio and land been “To this d”. and we environment image of 2019, counci resurrected. at Oliver ’s inform day, I have Franks ion to the whole have listened, n. I heard Timesfacility plans managers” (“New In Octob l abando ation reliabl responsible,”ally and econom ton, is your not thank a multiFrankston er the 31/1/22). on the horizo ned million y sugges seen any ically n” The input.” he Oliver ’s community you Mr dollar boat its plans for Hill develo ting that and consulted said. “I have listeneirfor state Edbrooke said The Better refuge there mitted to widely, and concer pment by d that a government Boating ns with comour enviro others poses Victoria you about I share many plan read that There grant to $147,000 zero nment, action Council for planni ing facility Franks our lifesty risk to build will be no further this projec in Franks ng for a boat- Creek is “the dredging at Kanan ton a harbou le, and action taken t. soon. In sole projec ton the Better should Januar am the state r at Oliver ’s to toria t chosen ook y a Better begin Hill member spokesperson from for FranksBoating Victor Boating of parliam whilst I “the ia action Victon told The locatio ent repplan Times that upon for many and has been ity would n and scope consul years Kanan of any ted be further includ explored facil- and ook Creek Adviso ing with the as per Franks through ry Comm Coastal ittee ton Counc Management il’s Draft Plan.”

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94th

RED HILL SHOW

Saturday 12 March 2022 |

Labour Day Weekend

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Mornington Peninsula Paddock - New Horticultural Stage & Activities - Cider & Mead Show - Woodchop Australian Mountainboarders - Exhibits - Animals galore from the smallest rats to heavy horses Sheep Shearing - Working Dogs - Pottery Workshops - Gumboot Throw - Tractors - Local Live Music Art & Craft Stalls - Food Trucks - Kids sports games- Face painting - Carnival Rides and much more... Red Hill Showgrounds Seat Rd, www.redhillshow.com.au Red Hill | 8.30 - 5pm Red Hill Showgrounds - Arthurs Seat Rd,- Arthurs Red Hill | 8.30 - 5pm Tickets ON SALE NOWwebsite via our website (pre-ticketed, safe event)atredhillshow.com.au ON SALE NOW via our for discount ticketscovid or purchase the gate (credit card preferred) SAVE with our EARLY BIRD SPECIAL...book before 25th February! Proudly supported by our major sponsors: Mornington Peninsula Shire, Hillview Quarries, MP News Group, 3MP Easy Listening, Balnarring Bendigo Bank, Hastings Mowers, Gendore Tractors, Mornington Toyota and Swan St Sales


Welcomes you to the 94th Red Hill Show - A celebration of our Mornington Peninsula producers, artisans and more! Back to celebrate our Red Hill Agricultural & Horticultural Society's 100th Birthday. Our 2022 program is jam packed full of exhibits, demonstrations, workshops, music and rides. Once you enter the showgrounds all the Pavilions, entertainment and rides are FREE. Bring this program on show day and create your own show experience!

RED HILL CIDER MARQUEE (Located in the MP Paddock) One of the largest Cider Shows nationally celebrating both New World and Traditional styles of cider and perry from across the country. The 2022 show will take place later in the year, but on show day you can meet our local producers and taste a full range of crafted ciders. 10.30

MORNINGTON PENINSULA PADDOCK STAGE

12.00

Special thanks to our celebrated MC Richard Cornish, local published Food Writer. We welcome Fiona Hammond, recipe developer and food stylist to the stage to share with us her knowledge on food prep. The Golden Sausage Award sponsored by Peter Bouchier will be judged by Richard and Paul Mercurio. Come and meet so many of our local Peninsula producers and share their passion for food, produce and more.

1.30 2.30

10.00 11.00 12.00

A Point of Difference (a comparison of cider made from concentrate Vs that made from cider apples) Orchard Life - tree training and answering all your vexing questions for managing your orchard (audience members, orchard enthusiasts prospective cider makers are asked to bring a fruit or leaf specimen or photograph of a problem tree for disease or nutrient deficiency diagnosis) Public Tasting of a full range of ciders Master Class - meet at the Tennis Club if you have your pre-booked ticket Hosted by: Mock Orchards | Harts Farm | Camilla's Crush Seven Oaks Farmhouse Cider | Cider Infusion

Fruit Cakes Judging by Noela McCleod, CWA - Junior & Open The 3rd Red Hill Apple Pie Competition - $500 prize money Fiona Hammond & Adrian Lander (Food photographer) - From produce, to plate, presentation and the final photo 1st Goldern Sausage Award - $500 prize money for Best in Show Producers Chat with Richard Cornish Raffle draw to win the MPP local produce boxes

1.30 3.00 3.45

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2nd Red Hill Mead Show (Located near the cider show marquee)

Our Mead show has become one of the largest in the country. Mead is the oldest known alcoholic beverage. With over 40 mead entries, come and see the Mead display, chat with a producer and learn more about this honey based beverage!

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NEW 3MP HORTICULTURAL HANGOUT ZONE We are thrilled to launch the new HORTICULTURAL HANGOUT ZONE where you can enjoy all things horticultural including presentations, workshops, food & refreshments and kids activities. Jon Vertigan from 3MP Breakfast show joins us as our Morning MC. Check out the program below:

10.00 10.30 11.00 12.00 12.30 1.00 1.30 2.00 3.00

Q & A seek your garden solutions - Keith Edwards & Elisabeth Kingman (Garden Girl) from Muddy Boots and Julie Bennett from Montalto Kitchen Garden /'Seeds are Free' Wall Plaque Workshop – free keepsake planting, Main Creek Men’s Shed & volunteers John Patrick – Creating enjoyable spaces in your garden (sponsor: Red Hill Garden Soc) Penny Woodward - Knowing, Growing and Harvesting garlic for gardeners. Creating with Flowers – free event local flowers grower Claire Barnes Heaviest Pumpkin Weigh Off Competition – enter Veg Exhibit #761 Wall Plaque Workshop – free keepsake planting, Main Creek Men’s Shed & volunteers Floral Beards Competition – enter Flower Exhibit #471... Guys decorate those beards! Environmental Presentation BUNNINGS PLANTING MARQUEE: A fun activity for the kids to get involved in potting and planting! Visit our Community Environmental Exhibits as part of this new initiative. including The Koala Conversation

PAVILIONS, DEMOS & ANIMAL EXHIBITS Agricultural Pavilions & Exhibits open at 8.30... the heart of a traditional agricultural show! (see map locations) Art | Cooking & Preserves (including Mead, Wine & Liquers) Craft | Flowers | Fruit | Honey | Photography | Vegetables

8.30 Alpaca Youth Paraders

9.00 Sheep Judging commences

9.00 Pet Fancy Rats

9.00 Ferret Racing

Stud | Black & Coloured

Judging commences

(Below public tennis courts)

(in Alpaca & Sheep Pavilion)

(Near Poultry)

(Behind Craft Pavilion)

9.00 Peninsula Wood Turners demos

9.00 McClelland Spinners & Weavers commences

9.00 Poultry Judging commences

(No major show this year)

(Near Netball Courts)

(Alpaca & Sheep Pavilion)

(Poultry Pavilion)

(Near Youth Paraders)

Judging commences

10.00 Miniature Goats

Judging commences

10.00 Cattle Judging commences

10.00 Woodchop

Judging commences

(Top Oval)

(Bottom Oval)

(See map)

(See map)

commences

9.00 Alpaca Display

Group, Landcare and many more...

WILLUM WARRAIN BUSH NURSERY Willum Willum is a 100% Aboriginal community-owned bush nursery specialising in local indigenous plants from the Mornington Peninsula. Many of the plants we sell have cultural uses and meanings for Aboriginal peoples in South East Australia. We are the only Aboriginal-run nursery retail and wholesale nursery south of Melbourne open to the public. We seek not to just sell plants but share cultural knowledge – every plant has its own dreaming. 11.00 PAGE B

10.00 Heavy Horses

Workshop and chat about Bush Tucker and indigenous plants Frankston Times

8 March 2022


Frankston

10-13 MARCH

MORNINGTON RACECOURSE Caravans & Campers, Motorhomes, Boats, Fishing Gear, 4x4, Camping Gear, Food & Wine, Demos, Travel & Adventure and more!

An independent voice for the community Your weekly community newspaper covering Frankston, Frankston South, Karingal, Langwarrin and Seaford For all advertising and editorial needs, call 03

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Tuesday 8 March 2022

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Artists see the bigger picture A GROUP of street artists will soon begin working in Frankston on murals for this month’s Big Picture Fest. Camilo Delgado (pictured) will return this year after assisting on a mural of a whale titled The Messenger last year. See story page 5 Picture: Supplied

No boat facility for Oliver’s Hill - MP Brodie Cowburn brodie@baysidenews.com.au A BOAT facility at Oliver’s Hill will not be built by the state government, Frankston MP Paul Edbrooke says. The recent release of Better Boating Victoria’s recreational boating action plan sparked fears that a proposal to build a boating facility at Oliver’s Hill had been resurrected. In October 2019, council abandoned its plans for a multi-million dollar boat refuge there

because of a lack of financial support from the state and federal governments. Mr Edbrooke says that he has told the fishing and boating minister that “any option to commence planning of a facility at Oliver’s Hill based on Frankston Council’s previous work is not to proceed”. “To this day, I have not seen any information reliably suggesting that the Oliver’s Hill development committed to by others poses zero risk to our environment, our lifestyle, and

in particular the jewel in Frankston’s crown, Frankston Beach. I agree with our community that any project which could risk unanticipated changes to the amazing Frankston Beach and waterfront, our largest tourist attraction and the iconic image of Frankston, is environmentally and economically irresponsible,” he said. “I have listened and consulted widely, and I share many concerns with you about this project. There will be no further action taken to build a harbour at Oliver’s Hill whilst I am the state member of parliament rep-

resenting the Frankston community. This decision was made after meeting with many community members and reflects the majority opinion. I heard you and we have listened, thank you to the whole Frankston community for your input.” The Better Boating Victoria action plan read that planning for a boating facility in Frankston should begin soon. In January a Better Boating Victoria spokesperson told The Times that “the location and scope of any facility would be further explored through

consultation with locals, user groups and facility and land managers” (“New boat facility plans on the horizon” The Times 31/1/22). Mr Edbrooke said that a $147,000 state government grant to Frankston Council for dredging at Kananook Creek is “the sole project chosen from the Better Boating Victoria action plan for Frankston and has been consulted upon for many years including with the Kananook Creek Advisory Committee and as per Frankston Council’s Draft Coastal Management Plan.”


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Frankston Times

8 March 2022


NEWS DESK

Cash splash at Seaford Wetlands MILLIONS of dollars are set to be splashed on the Seaford Wetlands. The state government has allocated $5 million to the Seaford Wetlands rejuvenation project. The funding will allow for the construction of a self-guided cultural trail, a shared use path around the wetlands, and environmental restoration works. Environment minister Lily D’Ambrosio said that the self-guided trail will be informed by a Bunurong Land Council Aboriginal Corporation Cultural Values Study. “I was delighted to launch the Seaford Wetlands Rejuvenation Project today and learn more about these very important wetlands from the Traditional Owners of the land, the Bunurong People,” she said. “Melbourne’s open spaces create a connection to nature and the rejuvenation of Seaford Wetlands can only enhance this connection.” Community consultation on the project has begun. Carrum MP Sonya Kilkenny said “we are so fortunate to have on our doorstep something as unique and critically important for biodiversity as the Seaford Wetlands. I encourage everyone to have their say on how these wetlands can be enhanced now, and for generations to come” To make a submission or find out more information visit engage.frankston.vic.gov.au/ seaford-wetlands-rejuvenation.

SEAFORD Wetlands. Picture: Gary Sissons

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SHARN COOMBES LIBERAL FOR DUNKLEY

Standing strong, fighting for our community Authorised by Sam McQuestin, Liberal Party of Australia (Victorian Division), L12, 257 Collins Street, Melbourne 3000 Frankston Times

8 March 2022

PAGE 3


NEWS DESK Proudly published by Mornington Peninsula News Group Pty. Ltd

PHONE: 03 5974 9000

Published weekly and distributed to Frankston, Frankston South, Karingal, Langwarrin, Seaford, Baxter and Somerville

Circulation: 28,320

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Cash for sports ground project promised THE federal Labor opposition has promised $10 million dollars towards the redevelopment of Emil Madsen Reserve. The Mount Eliza sporting ground is home to Mount Eliza Junior Football Club, Mount Eliza Soccer Club, Mount Eliza Football Netball Club, and Mount Eliza Cricket Club. The redevelopment would see the construction of two new pavilions and the upgrade of an existing one. A recently developed masterplan for the sporting ground also outlines a proposal for the creation of a district level play space and skate park. Dunkley MP Peta Murphy said that

the upgrade would allow the clubs which play at the reserve to grow. “This terrific project will benefit some of the largest sporting clubs in our region by creating a high quality and multi-functional facility. Labor supports this vision and will fund the upgrade to the tune of $10 million,” she said. “Over the past few years, we have seen major redevelopments of other reserves in our region and now it’s Mount Eliza’s turn. Since I was elected I have written to and met with ministers, including the Deputy Prime Minister, lobbying for this upgrade. Unfortunately, the government’s re-

sponse has been that there’s no money available. This upgrade will greatly benefit the Mount Eliza community, that’s why Labor will deliver it.” Shadow infrastructure minister Catherine King said “sport plays such an important role in our lives. This investment will mean more kids, more families, and importantly more girls and women can get involved in sport and involved with their local community.” “Peta Murphy has been such a strong advocate for this project. I know that after the election she will get straight to work to ensure it is delivered as soon as possible,” she said.

OPPOSITION MPs Catherine King and Peta Murphy at Emil Madsen Reserve with local athletes. Pic: Supplied

REGULAR CONTRIBUTORS: Peter McCullough, Stuart McCullough, Craig MacKenzie, Ben Triandafillou ADDRESS: Mornington Peninsula News Group PO Box 588 Hastings 3915 Email: team@baysidenews.com.au Web: baysidenews.com.au DEADLINE FOR NEXT ISSUE: 1PM ON THURSDAY 10 MARCH 2022 NEXT ISSUE PUBLICATION DATE: TUESDAY 15 MARCH 2022

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Frankston Times

8 March 2022

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Artworks will make a big impression GIANT paintings will begin appearing around Frankston soon, with Big Picture Fest getting underway this month. Street artists will soon get to work on their giant murals. Artists who will create artworks this year include Adnate, Baxter, Bond Truluv, Dvate, George Rose, Ghostpatrol, 23RD KEY, Benjamin Knock, Ling, Morano, Melanie Caple, Scott Nagy and Krims One, REFUZ, Vans the Omega, and Zedr. Street artist Camilo Delgado, also known as REFUZ, assisted another artist with their mural last year. He said it is “just so cool” to return this year as an artist. “While I studied graphic design, my work is more illustrative. I like to create scenes and tell a story,” he said. “My mural will talk about fears. I think for all of us, living with the virus these past few years have been a hard time, so I want to talk about all this fear that we have but how we still can live with it. Fear is not going to disappear but we can live with that.” The yearly Big Picture Fest regularly brings in big crowds. It runs this year from 14 March to 20 March. Street art walking tours will be running throughout the festival. The tours were recently shortlisted for a prize at the 2021 Australian Street Art Awards in the best street art tour category. Awards director Liz Rivers said “being shortlisted in the awards cements Frankston’s reputation as an aspirational destination for lovers of visually stunning experiences, with the city centre being home to 40 amazing artworks.” For more information on Big Picture Fest visit discoverfrankston.com/events/the-bigpicture-fest

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ARTISTS working on a mural for the Big Picture Fest. Picture: Supplied ADVERTISEMENT

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Frankston Times

8 March 2022

PAGE 5


NEWS DESK

Artificial reef stirs environmental anger Keith Platt keith@baysidenews.com.au

ONE of 16 separate concrete sections of an artificial reef destined to be placed on the seabed in southern Port Phillip near Point Nepean. Picture: Supplied

ENVIRONMENTALISTS have reacted angrily to news that an artificial reef will this month be submerged at the southern end of Port Phillip near Point Nepean. Port Phillip Conservation Council secretary Jenny Warfe wants installation of the reef delayed “so that scientific studies and other rationale can be made publicly available”. Ms Warfe said her group - a “federation” of 14 conservation groups and their “many hundreds of individual members” - could “find no evidence” of an environmental effects study being made into the artificial reef plan. She said the reef was planned to be placed near the sanctuary for the bay’s estimated 100 Burranan dolphins and a marine national park. “Understandably, concerned citizens must be assured that these charismatic creatures will not be adversely affected by this poorly justified reef project,” Ms Warfe said in a letter sent to Energy, Environment and Climate Change Minister Lily D’Ambrosio and Fishing and Boating Minister Melissa Horne. Ms Warfe said the environment groups had first heard about the imminent placement of the artificial concrete reef through an article in The News (“Artificial reef off Point Nepean” 21/2/22). Futurefish Foundation director David Kramer, a consultant to the state government, said an identical reef at Shoalhaven, NSW had “proven to be outstanding in attracting yellowtail kingfish”. He said the 16 concrete modules would “quickly obtain weed growth and provide a perfect reef in strong tidal waters”, forming the largest artificial reef in Victoria. Mr Kramer last week told The Times that the reef “is only weeks away” from arriving in Port

Phillip from where was being built in Tasmania. He said he would be filming the arrival and placement of the reef for a documentary commissioned by the state government. Mr Kramer knew about letters sent to government by the greenies “who are up in arms”. He said environmental studies “are all done, and a proper process followed”. Nepean MP Chris Brayne said the artificial reef “was originally canvassed in 2019 with the hopes of seeing it happen in the winter of 2020” (“Reefs plan to improve bays fish stocks” The Times 6/11/19). “Obviously with COVID, this expected date did not progress and has now restarted in 2022,” he said. “The area of the bay where it is to be located sees a high volume of anglers, so this will be an exciting development for many of them.” Michelle Cheers, of Rye Community Group Alliance, said she could find no evidence of studies into “what, if any, impact the reefs may have on wave seabed dynamics and in turn the nearby bay beaches. It is a very volatile part of the bay”. “In short, a lot of us are over this self-serving fishing lobby group that seems to be able to do what it wants with no regard to the impact on the bay marine system,” she said. “Other bay stakeholders are simply ignored by the government. We have seen this disregard with jet skis and spider crab plundering.” “Why does the Futurefish Foundation have the premier’s [Daniel Andrews] ear when the rest of us are lucky to get a response to a query from a bureaucrat in under three months?” When asking the ministers to delay placing the reef, Ms Warfe predicted it would attract other bay users, such as divers, adventurous swimmers, and jet ski riders, giving rise to “inevitable territorial disputes”.

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Frankston Times

8 March 2022


Police patrol

with Brodie Cowburn

Murder charge Two arrested for A MAN has been charged with the murder of a man in Baxter more than four years ago. On 16 September 2017, a man was allegedly shot to death at his home in Baxter. The 64-year-old victim lived on Station Crescent. Last week on 4 March, police arrested a 49-year-old Baxter man and charged him with murder. He was scheduled to face the Frankston Magistrates Court the same day. Police say that the alleged killer and the victim were known to each other.

Baby returned safe A FRANKSTON man has been charged with kidnapping after allegedly stealing a car with a baby inside it. Police allege that an 11-month old baby was inside the car when it was taken. The baby was later reunited with his family unharmed. The car, a 2013 Toyota Rav4, was allegedly stolen just after 2pm on 1 March from Putt Grove in Keysborough. After a call from the public, police found the car and baby in Cranbourne at around 5.40pm that day. A 46-year-old Frankston man has since been charged with kidnapping, theft of motor vehicle, commit indictable offence whilst on bail, and unlicensed driving. He was remanded to appear before the Melbourne Magistrates’ Court.

drug trafficking AROUND $280,000 worth of illicit drugs have been seized after a search of a house in Frankston, police say. Police executed a search warrant at a Frankston home on 22 February. The warrant was executed as part of an investigation into an alleged aggravated burglary in Carrum Downs during which an elderly victim was assaulted. Police allegedly seized around 375 grams of cocaine, 125 grams of methylamphetamine, 125 grams of MDMA, a kilo of cannabis, and $1750 in cash. A 29-year-old Frankston man has been charged with trafficking and possession of a commercial quantity of cocaine, methylamphetamine and MDMA, dealing with the proceeds of crime, and failing to provide a passcode to a data storage device. A 22-year-old Frankston woman was also arrested. She was charged with trafficking and possession of a commercial quantity of cocaine, methylamphetamine and MDMA. The man has been remanded to appear before the Melbourne Magistrates Court on 18 May 2022. The woman was bailed to appear at the Melbourne Magistrates Court on the same day.

Driver five times over A WOMAN has been caught driving with a blood alcohol reading five times over the legal limit in Langwarrin, police say. The 43-year-old woman was pulled

over on Warrandyte Road in Langwarrin, around 12.40am on 27 February. Police took the Kia Rio driver to the police station where she allegedly returned an evidentiary breath test reading of .250. In a statement police said the woman is “expected to be charged on summons with drink driving and other traffic related offences.”

Cop car rammed POLICE arrested a group of teenagers after their police car was rammed last month. Detectives looking into a series of aggravated burglaries and aggravated carjackings were at a car park at the intersection of Ballarto and FrankstonDandenong Road just before midnight on 27 February when they spotted an allegedly stolen car. They attempted to stop the car but were allegedly rammed. Police say the car was a Land Rover taken from Malvern East earlier that day. Five boys aged in their teens were soon arrested in relation to the incident.

Commodore speeding POLICE allegedly caught a man driving more than double the speed limit in Carrum Downs last week. The man was allegedly speeding down Ballarto Road at 4.50am, 27 February. Police clocked his Holden Commodore sedan at 150 kmph in a 70 zone. The car was impounded for a month at a cost of $1390. The 38-year-old man is expected to be summonsed to appear before a magistrate.

A MAN police want to speak to about an alleged sexual act committed on a train near a teenage girl. Picture: Supplied

Train offender wanted by police A MAN is wanted by police after allegedly committing an “explicit sexual act” near a teenager on a Frankston line train earlier this year. Police allege the man committed the crime with a 14-year-old girl present. The train they were on was travelling between Southland and Chelsea railway stations on Friday, 14 January at around 4pm. The man exited the train at Carrum Station. An image of a man police wish to

speak to has been released. In a statement police describe him as “Caucasian in appearance, with a heavy build, short dark balding hair and a tattoo on his right forearm. He was wearing a black sleeveless t-shirt and black kneelength shorts.” Anyone who recognises the man can contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or submit a confidential crime report at www.crimestoppersvic.com.au.

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PAGE 7


NEWS DESK

Free forum for elderly legal issues

(L to R) DIANA Heggie and Felicity Topp from Peninsula Health, MPs Peta Murphy and Greg Hunt, Professors Velandai Srikanth and Christina Mitchell. Picture: Supplied

Research facility will collect ageing data A NEW research facility opened at Frankston Hospital will collect data and information about ageing. Ngarnga Centre - Ideas, Innovation and Learning has been officially opened. The research facility houses a component of the National Centre for Healthy Ageing, the Healthy Ageing Data Platform. The new centre is a joint venture with Monash University. The project was funded partly through a $2 million contribution from the federal

government. Peninsula Health CEO Felicity Topp said that the project would allow the organisation to focus on “improving health outcomes by enabling translational research across both Peninsula Health and Monash University and through the National Centre for Healthy Ageing.” “This is a pivotal moment in the development of Peninsula Health, our partnership with Monash University and the further progression

of the Frankston health precinct,” Ms Topp said. “By creating a state-of-the-art environment for our clinicians, researchers and students, we are significantly expanding our research profile.” Dean of medicine, nursing, and health sciences at Monash University, Professor Christina Mitchell, says that “substantial progress” has been made to the Healthy Ageing Data Platform since 2020. “National Centre for Healthy Ageing researchers

now have access to big data to provide population-level insights into pressing issues regarding healthy ageing for our communities. It links various large sources of health data to support the NCHA in developing solutions for these issues,” she said. Peninsula Health estimates that older Australians will make up 22 per cent of the Australian population by 2057. For more information visit www. ncha.org.au .

Plant Sale $4.95 LEIGHTON GREEN SCREEN

Plus

A FREE legal forum for seniors will be held this month. The Peninsula Community Legal Centre, a not-for-profit which provides free legal services, is hosting the seniors legal forum as part of its elder law service month. The event will address legal issues often faced by older people. Peninsula Community Legal Centre CEO Jackie Galloway says that “many life events associated with ageing involve legal issues. We are holding this community event and launching our elder law service to meet a steadily rising demand for advice on elder law problems”. Speakers will talk about issues including the aged care Royal Commission, financial scams, powers of attorney, and estate planning. The Legal Matters and Ageing Forum will be at the Safety Beach Community Centre, 185 Marine Drive, Safety Beach on 18 March 2022 from 10.30am – 12:30pm. To register visit pclcseniorsforum.eventbrite.com. au, call Peninsula Community Legal Centre on 9783 3600, or email pclc@ pclc.org.au. PCLC’s Frankston office is at 441 Nepean Highway.

Citrus Available ! ! e g n a R e g Hu

g re a t s c re e n ! $4.95 FICUS FLASH

$17.95 LEMONICIOUS DWARF LEMON

$49.95 DWARF FRUIT TREES

WHOLESALE Plants Screening Plants from $4.95 HUGE RANGE! from $4.95

INDOOR PL ANTS AND POTS AVAILABLE *ONLY WHILE STOCKS LAST

427 Coolart Road, Somerville PAGE 8

Frankston Times

8 March 2022

Phone: 5977 8912


Grant to plant more trees TREE planting projects in the Frankston area will be supported by a federal government grant. Funding of between $2500 and $20,000 is on offer through the Planting Trees for the Queen’s Jubilee Program. Funding received through the program can be used for the planting of trees, installation of fences, site preparation, and for signs. Dunkley MP Peta Murphy says that the grants program will “support community organisations to improve the local environment by increasing the tree canopy here in Dunkley.” “I encourage interested organisations to contact my office or visit my website to receive an

Western Port Highway closed at Ballarto and Cranbourne-Frankston roads

expression of interest form,” she said. Expressions of interest are open until 5pm, 18 March. Contact Peta Murphy’s office on 9781 2333 or visit www.petamurphy.net to receive a form.

Detours in place from 10pm 16 Mar to 5am 4 Apr DUNKLEY MP Peta Murphy plants a tree with help from students in Mt Eliza. Picture: Supplied

We’re fast-tracking works to upgrade the intersections of Ballarto Road and Cranbourne-Frankston Road several months early. We’ll close both roundabouts from 10pm 16 March to 5am 4 April for preliminary works to upgrade the roundabouts to traffic lights. Detours will be in place via South Gippsland Highway and Peninsula Link for through traffic, and via Potts Road and Pearcedale Road for local traffic only. Please follow on-road signs as you travel. Delays of up to 30 minutes are expected, please plan ahead and allow extra travel time.

3685

Find out if you’re affected at bigbuild.vic.gov.au Authorised by the Victorian Government, 1 Treasury Place, Melbourne

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Frankston Times

8 March 2022

PAGE 9


NEWS DESK

Tributes for passionate volunteer taken too soon Brodie Cowburn brodie@baysidenews.com.au A MUCH-loved local volunteer who died aged just 27 has been remembered for her kindness and generosity. Natasha Drake, known to many as Tash, was a volunteer with Chelsea SES and the Starlight Foundation. She died on 22 February after suffering a ruptured brain aneurysm. Ms Drake’s father Glenn said that the support his family has received from the community has been “a great comfort at this terrible time”. “We are overwhelmed at the outpouring of love and support from so many people, including her fellow volunteers at Chelsea SES,” he said. “Some that knew Tash, but many who had never met her, and just wanted to thank her for what she had given to the community.” Ms Drake spent a little more than five years volunteering with the Chelsea SES unit. She was part of the unit management team. Her fellow SES volunteers have paid heartfelt tributes to her, remembering her as a giving person. Chelsea SES controller Ron Fitch said “Tash was so generous with everything she did at the unit, nothing was too much trouble. It was just Tash being Tash, to want to help others”. Chelsea SES deputy controller Phil Wall said “I am honoured to have been asked by the family to conduct the funeral service in my role as a celebrant. It is going to be so tough, but I couldn’t say no for Tash.” During her time working as part of the SES community engagement team, Ms Drake visited kinders, preschools, and schools. Students from Beachwood Early Learning Centre in Bonbeach have worked together on a condolence card which was sent to the SES unit last week. Tash Drake was an organ donor. It is hoped that her organs will be used in a final act of generosity to save the lives of people who need them.

TASH Drake (middle) with fellow SES volunteers Ron Fitch (left) and Phil Wall (right). Picture: Supplied

Smile Squad is on its way The Victorian Government is making it easier for our kids to get the dental care they need. Find out more at smilesquad.vic.gov.au

F R E E D E N TA L

Join the campaign for:

A basketball and gymnastics stadium

A bigger and better Pines Pool

A revitalised Sandfield Reserve

Expanded access to recycled water

An arts and sculpture shared user path from Frankston to Langwarrin

2022 Advocacy Priorities Throughout August 2020 and February 2021, Council asked the Frankston City community for feedback and ideas on the issues that matter to them, how we can improve the challenges they face in their daily lives and their vision for the future of Frankston City. The results have been used to determine the key priorities requiring Council-led advocacy in the lead up to the upcoming state and federal elections. Our five key priorities above were adopted at the 15 November 2021 Council Meeting.

PAGE 10

Frankston Times

8 March 2022

Scan the QR code or visit frankston. vic.gov.au/Advocacy-2021-2025 for more information


The Guide TOP PICKS OF THE WEEK

SATURDAY

CELEBRITY LETTERS AND NUMBERS

FRIDAY

SBS, 7.30pm

MINISERIES: THE TEACHER

ABC TV, 8.30pm

Starring Sheridan Smith (left), there’s more than a whiff of melodrama in the four-part British drama. The Teacher is a wayward cocktail of inappropriate behaviour, jealous colleagues and backstabbing friends, which all sounds very promising until it gives you a headache. Is it the story of a popular teacher going off the rails, or a case of some bad decisions and nefarious students? It all begins to go pear-shaped as teacher Jenna Garvey (Smith) is accused of sleeping with her pupil after a night out.

SUNDAY

COMPASS

ABC TV PLUS, 7.30pm

Perhaps you’re a takeaway kind of person on a Sunday evening, or maybe you love a roast, but no matter what gets you hungry, Compass has your spiritual cravings covered. After more than 30 years of stories revolving around the intersection between religion and life, recently there has been a series of “sacred space” episodes. This week, these insightful and intimate instalments return with journalist Marc Fennell opening up his safe space: the kitchen.

Affordable and Compassionate Serving Melbourne and the Mornington Peninsula for over 75 years

FRIDAY

GREEN BOOK

SEVEN, 8.30pm

A surprise winner of the Best Picture Oscar, this comedy directed by Peter Farrelly (Dumb & Dumber, There’s Something About Mary, Shallow Hal) is a refreshing take on the road-trip movie. In the early 1960s, distinguished African American pianist Don (Mahershala Ali, above) hires tough-talking Italian American bouncer Tony (Viggo Mortensen) as his chauffeur for a concert tour through America’s Midwest and Deep South. An unlikely friendship develops, with the struggle to find common ground proving to be the emotional core of their journey. Green Book is a must-watch for those burnt-out by the usual Hollywood fare.

3 Hastings Road, Frankston VIC 3199 155 Sladen Street, Cranbourne VIC 3977

Ordinary folk can turn out to be not so “ordinary” as they show off their impressive brain matter in this lighthearted and fun game show. But plunk a few celebrities into the mathematical and alphabetical flurry and the entertainment level goes up a few decibels; the spectacle ends up being more about showmanship than knowing the dictionary inside-out. Tonight, host Michael Hing (triple j) is joined by comedians Benjamin Law, Concetta Caristo, Bob Downe and Carlo Ritchie in a test of their word and numerical resourcefulness. It’ll be maths whiz Lily Serna and wordsmith David Astle’s job to keep them on course. Lily Serna is the maths expert on Celebrity Letters And Numbers.

8781 1400

Thursday, March 10 ABC TV (2)

SBS (3)

SEVEN (7)

NINE (9)

TEN (10)

6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 10.00 Australian Story. (R) 10.30 Nigella At My Table. (R) 11.00 Catalyst. (PG, R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 Hard Quiz. (PG, R) 1.30 Shaun Micallef’s MAD AS HELL. (M, R) 2.10 Unforgotten. (Mlv, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.00 Escape From The City. (R) 4.55 Kurt Fearnley’s One Plus One. (R) 5.25 Hard Quiz. (PG, R)

6.00 WorldWatch. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 ABC America: World News Tonight. 1.00 PBS NewsHour. (R) 2.00 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw Bitesize. (R) 2.05 Travel Man’s Greatest Trips. (PGl, R) 3.00 World’s Most Luxurious… (R) 3.55 Queen Victoria’s Children. (PG, R) 5.05 Jeopardy! 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)

6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Sweet November. (2001, Ms, R) 2.30 Dog Patrol. (PGa, R) 3.00 The Chase. (R) 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia.

6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 Married At First Sight. (Mal, R) 1.30 Driving Test. (PG, R) 2.00 Pointless. (PG) 3.00 Tipping Point. (PG) 4.00 Afternoon News. 5.00 Millionaire Hot Seat.

6.00 The Talk. (PGa) 7.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 7.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG, R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (Mas) 1.00 First Dates Australia. (PGls, R) 2.00 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. (R) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 3.30 Freshly Picked With Simon Toohey. 4.00 Farm To Fork. (PG) 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG) 5.00 10 News First.

6.00 The Drum. 6.55 Sammy J. (PG) 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 Foreign Correspondent. International current affairs program. 8.30 Q+A. Public affairs program. 9.35 Rosie Batty’s One Plus One: Stephanie Alexander. Rosie Batty speaks with Stephanie Alexander. 10.05 Griff’s Great Kiwi Road Trip. (R) 10.55 ABC Late News. 11.10 The Business. (R) 11.25 The Exhibitionists. (Mns, R) 12.25 Unforgotten. (Madlv, R) 1.10 The Letdown. (Ml, R) 2.15 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 4.25 The Drum. (R) 5.20 Sammy J. (PG, R) 5.25 7.30. (R)

6.00 Mastermind Australia. (PG) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.35 Scenic Coastal Walks With Kate Humble. (Final, PG) 8.30 The Royals: Keeping The Crown: Nazi Royals. (PG) Explores the history of royal families. 9.30 Britain’s Most Expensive Houses. (PG) 10.30 SBS World News Late. 11.00 Gomorrah. (Malv) 11.50 In Therapy. (Mal, R) 12.15 Cycling. UCI World Tour. Paris-Nice Race. Stage 5. 2.15 Blinded. (Mlv, R) 4.00 VICE Guide To Film. (MA15+av, R) 4.55 Destination Flavour Scandinavia Bitesize. (R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.

6.00 Seven News. 7.00 Home And Away. (PGa) 8.30 Miniseries: Showtrial. (Mals) Part 5 of 5. It appears time has run out for Talitha and her solicitor, Cleo, as the trial reaches its explosive conclusion and the jury finally decides whether she is guilty of murdering her fellow university student. 9.50 The Speedboat Killer. (M) A look at the death of Charlotte Brown. 11.50 The Latest: Seven News. 12.20 MOVIE: Secrets In Suburbia. (2017, MA15+a) Brianna Brown. 2.30 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 NBC Today. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 Marvellous Moomba. 8.00 RBT. (Mdl, R) 8.30 Australia Behind Bars. (Madl) Wellington officers crack down on contraband. 9.30 A+E After Dark. (Mlm) A woman arrives with spinal and head injuries. 10.30 Nine News Late. 11.00 New Amsterdam. (Mamv, R) 11.45 The Horn. (Malm, R) 12.35 Tipping Point. (PG, R) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Global Shop. (R) 3.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Believer’s Voice Of Victory. (PGa) 4.30 A Current Affair. (R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.

6.30 The Project. A look at the day’s news and events. 7.30 First Dates Australia. Two bodybuilders form a connection. 8.30 Gogglebox Australia. (Return) TV fanatics open up their living rooms to reveal their reactions to popular and topical TV shows. 9.30 To Be Advised. 10.30 Blue Bloods. (Ma) Frank contends with a public outcry. 11.30 The Project. (R) 12.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) 1.30 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.

ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s

Programs. 7.10pm Andy And The Band. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.30 Penn & Teller: Fool Us. 9.10 Hard Quiz. 9.40 Shaun Micallef’s MAD AS HELL. 10.10 QI. 10.45 Gruen. 11.20 Live At The Apollo. 12.05am Would I Lie To You? 12.35 Community. 1.00 Parks And Recreation. 1.20 Plebs. 1.45 Close. 5.05 Little Princess. 5.15 Hoot Hoot Go! 5.20 Pingu In The City. 5.30 Wallykazam! 5.55 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon Jasper And Errol’s First Time. 1.00 Mr Tachyon On The Edge Of Science. 1.30 Most Expensivest. 2.00 Gaycation. 2.50 Cyberwar. 3.50 WorldWatch. 5.15 Joy Of Painting. 5.45 Shortland St. 6.15 Alone. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 8.30 The Curse Of Oak Island. 10.10 Chasing Famous. 11.00 The Feed. 11.30 Late Programs.

7TWO (72) 6am Home Shopping. 6.30 Travel Oz. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. Noon Miniseries: Little Boy Blue. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 The Great Australian Doorstep. 2.30 Sons And Daughters. 4.30 Medical Rookies. 5.00 Australia’s Deadliest. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Father Brown. 8.30 Inspector George Gently. 12.30am Late Programs.

9GEM (92) 6am TV Shop. 7.00 Creflo. 7.30 TV Shop. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon Days Of Our Lives. 12.55 The Young And The Restless. 1.50 The Bill. 3.00 Antiques Roadshow. 3.30 MOVIE: Our Man In Marrakesh. (1966) 5.30 Murder, She Wrote. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 Rugby League. NRL. Round 1. Penrith Panthers v Manly Sea Eagles. 10.00 DCI Banks. Midnight Late Programs.

10 PEACH (11) 6am The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 7.00 Frasier. 8.00 The King Of Queens. 9.00 Becker. 10.00 The Middle. 11.00 Frasier. Noon This Is Us. 1.00 The Big Bang Theory. 1.30 Friends. 2.00 Mom. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Becker. 5.00 Frasier. 6.00 Friends. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.00 Friends. 8.00 The Big Bang Theory. 9.30 Seinfeld. 11.00 Mom. Midnight Shopping. 1.30 Late Programs.

N ITV (34) 6am Morning Programs. 1.30pm Going Native. 2.00 Shortland St. 2.30 Chefs’ Line. 3.00 Bushwhacked! 3.25 The Magic Canoe. 3.50 Wolf Joe. 4.00 Aussie Bush Tales. 4.10 Grace Beside Me. 4.35 Mustangs FC. 5.00 Our Stories. 5.30 The 77 Percent. 6.00 Bamay. 6.30 News. 6.40 Land Of Primates. 7.30 Going Places With Ernie Dingo. 8.30 Tribal. 9.20 MOVIE: Arrowhead. (2015, M) 11.10 Late Programs.

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am Strings. Continued. (2004, PG) 6.40 Watership Down. (1978, PG) 8.20 Blinded By The Light. (2019, PG) 10.35 The Hedgehog. (2009, M, French) 12.20pm The Salvation. (2014, M) 2.05 Every Day. (2018, PG) 3.55 Little Nicolas. (2009, PG, French) 5.35 Adam. (2019, PG) 7.30 Their Finest. (2016, M) 9.40 Madame. (2017, M) 11.20 The Killing Of A Sacred Deer. (2017, M) 1.35am Late Programs.

7MATE (73) 6am Morning Programs. 1pm Desert Collectors. 1.30 Storage Wars. 2.00 Leepu And Pitbull. 3.00 Wild Transport. 3.30 Shipping Wars. 4.00 Fish’n With Mates. 4.30 Pawn Stars. 5.00 Pawn Stars South Africa. 5.30 Storage Wars: TX. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 MOVIE: Lethal Weapon 3. (1992, M) 10.00 MOVIE: Executive Decision. (1996, M) 1am Late Programs.

9GO! (93) 6am Children’s Programs. Noon Xena. 2.00 Hercules. 3.00 The Nanny. 3.30 3rd Rock. 4.00 That ’70s Show. 4.30 Raymond. 5.30 The Nanny. 6.00 3rd Rock. 6.30 That ’70s Show. 7.00 Young Sheldon. 7.30 Survivor 42. (Return) 9.30 Surviving The Stone Age: Adventure To The Wild. (Premiere) 10.30 Young Sheldon. 11.00 Raymond. 11.30 Weird Science. Midnight #Killerpost. 1.00 Reverie. 2.00 Late Programs.

10 BOLD (12) 6am Home Shopping. 8.00 What’s Up Down Under. 8.30 NBL Slam. 9.00 Jake And The Fatman. 10.00 Diagnosis Murder. 11.00 JAG. Noon NCIS. 1.00 Walker, Texas Ranger. 3.00 Jake And The Fatman. 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 JAG. 6.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 Bull. 10.30 NCIS: Los Angeles. 11.30 NCIS. 12.30am Home Shopping. 2.00 NCIS: New Orleans. 4.00 Walker, Texas Ranger.

CONSUMER ADVICE (P) Pre-school (C) Children (PG) Parental Guidance Recommended (M) Mature Audiences (MA15+) Mature Audiences Only (AV15+) Extreme Adult Violence (R) Repeat (a) Adult themes (d) Drug references (h) Horror (s) Sex references (l) Language (m) Medical procedures (n) Nudity (v) Violence.

Frankston Times – TV Guide

8 March 2022

MEL/VIC

PAGE 1


Friday, March 11 ABC (2)

SBS (3)

SEVEN (7)

NINE (9)

TEN (10)

6.00 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 Gardening Australia. Costa Georgiadis visits a native sanctuary. 8.30 Miniseries: The Teacher. (Mals) Part 1 of 4. A teacher is accused of sleeping with her pupil after a night out celebrating a promotion. 9.20 Grantchester. (Mv, R) A murder sees racial tensions spike. 10.05 Mum. (Ml, R) 10.40 ABC Late News. 10.55 Shaun Micallef’s MAD AS HELL. (M, R) 11.25 Starstruck. (Mal, R) 11.45 QI. (Final, Ms, R) 12.15 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv)

6.00 Mastermind Australia. (PG) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.35 Robson Green’s Icelandic Adventure. (M) 8.30 Queen Victoria: Love, Lust And Leadership. Part 1 of 3. 9.25 The Pyramids: Solving The Mystery: Meidum And The Mystery Of The False Pyramid. (R) Explores the Meidum pyramid. 10.20 SBS World News Late. 10.50 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. (Mals, R) 11.50 I Am Emmanuel. (PGa, R) 12.10 Cycling. UCI World Tour. Paris-Nice Race. Stage 6. 2.10 Dynamo Beyond Belief. (Ml, R) 4.40 Bamay. (R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.

6.00 Seven News. 7.00 Better Homes And Gardens. Dr Harry meets a bitey lorikeet. 8.30 MOVIE: Green Book. (2018, Ml) Based on a true story. In the ’60s, a distinguished African-American pianist hires a tough-talking Italian-American bouncer as his chauffeur for a concert tour through America’s Midwest and Deep South. Viggo Mortensen, Mahershala Ali, Linda Cardellini. 11.15 To Be Advised. 12.45 Scandal. (Mav, R) The Gladiators make the ultimate sacrifice. 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Million Dollar Minute. (R) 5.00 NBC Today.

6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 Escape To The Chateau. (Return) It is winter and the chateau is turned into an icy palace. 8.35 MOVIE: The Blind Side. (2009, PGdlv, R) A homeless teenager realises his dream of becoming a gridiron player, thanks to the aid of a kind family. Sandra Bullock, Tim McGraw. 11.15 Reported Missing: Archie. (Ma, R) 12.30 Tipping Point. (PG, R) 1.00 Bondi Lifeguard World Adventures. (PGl) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Take Two. (R) 4.30 Global Shop. (R) 5.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 5.30 A Current Affair. (R)

6.30 The Project. The hosts and guest panellists take a look at the day’s news, events and hot topics. 7.30 To Be Advised. 8.40 The Graham Norton Show. (PG, R) Guests include Eddie Redmayne, Jessie Buckley, Stephen Merchant, Motsi Mabuse and Sir Ian McKellen. Music from Sir Elton John and Charlie Puth, who perform After All. 9.40 To Be Advised. 11.40 The Project. (R) The hosts and guest panellists take a look at the day’s news, events and hot topics. 12.40 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) Late-night talk show. 1.30 Home Shopping. (R)

ABC COMEDY (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7pm Dino Dana. 7.10 Andy And The Band. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 Hard Quiz. 8.30 MOVIE: Infamous. (2006, M) 10.25 MOVIE: Looking For Eric. (2009, MA15+) 12.20am QI. 12.50 Community. 1.15 Parks And Recreation. 1.40 Grand Designs. 2.25 ABC News Update. 2.30 Close. 5.05 Little Princess. 5.15 Hoot Hoot Go! 5.20 Pingu In The City. 5.30 Wallykazam! 5.55 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon MOVIE: Shanghai Surprise. (1986, M) 1.40 Flophouse. 2.10 Hunters. 3.00 Jungletown. 3.50 WorldWatch. 5.15 Joy Of Painting. 5.45 Shortland St. 6.15 Alone. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 8.30 Hoarders. 9.25 Fukushima: Nature In The Danger Zone. 10.20 Day Of The Dead. 11.10 Instinctive Desires. Midnight News. 12.55 Criminal Planet. 1.45 Late Programs.

7TWO (72)

6am Home Shopping. 6.30 Travel Oz. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. Noon House Of Wellness. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 Jabba’s Movies. 2.30 Sons And Daughters. 4.30 Medical Rookies. 5.00 Australia’s Deadliest. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Railroad Australia. 8.30 Selling Houses Australia. 11.45 Late Programs.

9GEM (92) 6am Morning Programs. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon Days Of Our Lives. 12.55 The Young And The Restless. 1.50 The Bill. 2.50 Antiques Roadshow. 3.20 MOVIE: The Story Of Gilbert And Sullivan. (1953) 5.30 Murder, She Wrote. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 Rugby League. NRL. Round 1. Brisbane Broncos v South Sydney Rabbitohs. 10.00 MOVIE: Gringo. (2018, MA15+) 12.20am Late Programs.

10 PEACH (11) 6am The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 7.00 NBL Slam. 7.30 Seinfeld. 9.00 Becker. 10.00 The Middle. 11.00 Frasier. Noon To Be Advised. 1.00 Mom. 1.30 Seinfeld. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Becker. 5.00 Frasier. 6.00 Friends. 8.00 The Big Bang Theory. 9.30 Mom. 11.00 Nancy Drew. Midnight Shopping. 1.30 Stephen Colbert. 2.30 James Corden. 3.30 Becker. 4.30 Shopping.

NITV (34)

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am

7MATE (73) 6am Morning Programs. 11.00 Motor Racing. Supercars Championship. Round 1. Sydney SuperNight. Day 2. Highlights. Noon MOVIE: Executive Decision. (1996, M) 2.45 Pawn Stars. 3.15 Shipping Wars. 4.15 Timbersports. 4.45 MOVIE: Maverick. (1994, PG) 7.30 MOVIE: Lethal Weapon 4. (1998, M) 10.05 MOVIE: Fire Down Below. (1997, M) 12.15am Late Programs.

9GO! (93) 6am Children’s Programs. Noon Xena. 2.00 Hercules. 3.00 The Nanny. 3.30 3rd Rock. 4.00 That ’70s Show. 4.30 Raymond. 5.30 MOVIE: Paddington 2. (2017) 7.30 MOVIE: The Great Wall. (2016, M) 9.30 MOVIE: 47 Ronin. (2013, M) 11.45 Raymond. 12.15am #Killerpost. 1.15 Reverie. 2.10 Below Deck. 3.00 Bakugan: Battle Planet. 3.30 Ninjago: Masters Of Spinjitzu. 4.00 TV Shop. 5.00 Late Programs.

10 BOLD (12) 6am Home Shopping. 8.00 Escape Fishing With ET. 8.30 Bondi Rescue. 9.00 Jake And The Fatman. 10.00 Diagnosis Murder. 11.00 JAG. Noon NCIS. 1.00 Walker, Texas Ranger. 3.00 Jake And The Fatman. 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 JAG. 6.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 Law & Order: SVU. 10.30 CSI: Crime Scene Investigation. 12.30am Shopping. 2.00 Late Programs.

6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 10.00 Q+A. (R) 11.10 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. (R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 Griff’s Great Kiwi Road Trip. (R) 1.50 The Beautiful Bush. (R) 2.10 Unforgotten. (Madlv, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.00 Escape From The City. (R) 4.55 Kurt Fearnley’s One Plus One. (R) 5.25 Hard Quiz. (PG, R)

6am Morning Programs. 2pm Shortland St. 2.30 Chefs’ Line. 3.00 Jarjums. 5.00 Our Stories. 5.30 NITV News: Nula. 6.00 Bamay. 6.35 News. 6.40 Land Of Primates. 7.30 Little J And Big Cuz. 7.45 MOVIE: Mosley. (2019, PG) 9.30 First Nations Bedtime Stories. 9.40 Through The Wormhole With Morgan Freeman. 10.30 NITV On The Road: Barunga Festival. 11.30 Late Programs.

6.00 WorldWatch. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 ABC America: World News Tonight. 1.00 PBS NewsHour. (R) 2.00 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw Bitesize. (R) 2.05 Travel Man’s Greatest Trips. (Mls, R) 3.00 NITV News: Nula. 3.30 Going Places With Ernie Dingo. (PGaw, R) 4.00 Queen Victoria’s Children. (PG, R) 5.05 Jeopardy! (PG) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)

Orlando. Continued. (1992, PG) 6.40 Little Nicolas. (2009, PG, French) 8.20 Strings. (2004, PG) 10.00 Adam. (2019, PG) 11.55 Chevalier. (2015, M, Greek) 1.55pm Watership Down. (1978, PG) 3.35 Toast. (2010, PG) 5.20 Blinded By The Light. (2019, PG) 7.30 The Kindergarten Teacher. (2018, M) 9.20 Destroyer. (2018, MA15+) 11.35 Good Manners. (2017, MA15+, Portuguese) 2.05am Late Programs.

6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Risky Business. (1983, Mls, R) 2.00 House Of Wellness. (PG) 3.00 The Chase. (R) 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia.

6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Watching Over You. (2018, Mav) Sierra McCormick, Beth Broderick, Trevor St. John. 1.45 Talking Honey: Princess Diana. (PG, R) 2.00 Pointless. (PG) 3.00 Tipping Point. (PG) 4.00 Millionaire Hot Seat. (R) 5.00 Afternoon News.

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6.00 The Talk. (PGa) 7.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 7.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG, R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PGa) 1.00 Australian Survivor. (R) 2.15 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. (R) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 3.30 Freshly Picked With Simon Toohey. 4.00 Farm To Fork. (PG) 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG) 5.00 10 News First.

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Saturday, March 12 ABC TV (2)

SBS (3)

SEVEN (7)

NINE (9)

TEN (10)

6.00 Rage. (PG) 7.00 Weekend Breakfast. 9.00 Rage. (PG) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 12.30 Midsomer Murders. (Mv, R) 2.00 Grantchester. (Mv, R) 2.45 Outback Ringer. (PG, R) 3.35 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. (R) 4.30 Landline. (R) 5.00 Basketball. WNBL. Round 14. Bendigo Spirit v Sydney Uni Flames. 7.00 ABC News. Takes a look at today’s top stories. 7.30 Death In Paradise. (Mdv) A bachelor party goes awry. 8.30 All Creatures Great And Small. (Final, PG) It is Christmas Eve, and the day before Helen and Hugh’s wedding, and everyone is gathering to celebrate at the Skeldale Christmas party. However, James is called away to help with a dog in labour. 9.30 Troppo. (Mal, R) Ted and Amanda’s hard work leads to Jong Min’s remains being found in the river. 10.30 Call The Midwife. (PG, R) Lucille is trapped in a lift with a woman in labour. 11.30 Les Misérables. (Mav, R) 12.30 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv)

6.00 WorldWatch. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 ABC America: World News Tonight. 1.00 PBS NewsHour. (R) 2.00 Sportswoman. 2.30 Sportswoman 2021. 3.00 FIFA World Cup 2022 Magazine. 3.30 The Seekers Farewell Concert. (R) 4.30 Blitzed: Nazis On Drugs. (PGad, R) 5.40 Secret Nazi Bases. (R) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Celebrity Letters And Numbers. (M) 8.30 Exploring Northern Ireland. (PG) Part 2 of 4. 9.30 World’s Greatest Bridges: Sydney Harbour Bridge. (PG, R) 10.20 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. (Mals, R) 11.15 Cycling. UCI World Tour. ParisNice Race. Stage 7. 1.10 MOVIE: The Girl Who Kicked The Hornet’s Nest. (2009, MA15+v, R, Sweden) Michael Nyqvist. 3.50 100 Vaginas. (MA15+lns, R) 4.45 Destination Flavour: Japan Bitesize. (R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.

6.00 NBC Today. 7.00 Weekend Sunrise. 10.00 The Morning Show: Weekend. (PG) 12.00 Horse Racing. Chandon Ladies Day and Super Saturday. 5.00 Seven News At 5. 5.30 Border Security: Australia’s Front Line. (PG, R) A penniless man arrives from Las Vegas. 6.00 Seven News. 7.00 Border Security: Australia’s Front Line. (PG) Narrated by Grant Bowler. 7.30 MOVIE: Indiana Jones And The Last Crusade. (1989, PGhv, R) Indiana Jones tries to locate his missing father. Harrison Ford, Sean Connery. 10.05 MOVIE: The Commuter. (2018, Malv, R) A man is caught up in a criminal conspiracy. Liam Neeson, Vera Farmiga. 12.15 MOVIE: Beast. (2015, Malv, R) Chad McKinney. 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Get Clever. (R) 5.00 House Of Wellness. (PG, R)

6.00 Easy Eats. (R) 7.00 Weekend Today. 10.00 Today Extra: Saturday. (PG) 12.00 Surfing Australia TV. (PG) 12.30 Drive TV. 1.00 My Way. (R) 1.30 Talking Honey: Relationship Specials. (PG, R) 1.35 Delish. 2.05 MOVIE: Annie. (2014, PGa, R) Quvenzhané Wallis, Jamie Foxx, Cameron Diaz. 4.30 The Garden Gurus. 5.00 News: First At Five. 5.30 Getaway. (PG) 6.00 Nine News Saturday. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 Australia Unites: Red Cross Flood Appeal. (PG) An appeal to raise much-needed funds in the wake of the devastation of the floods in Queensland and New South Wales. 10.30 MOVIE: Patch Adams. (1998, Mal, R) A trainee doctor runs afoul of his teachers. Robin Williams, Daniel London. 12.45 Tipping Point. (PG, R) 1.35 Drive TV. (R) 2.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 Global Shop. (R) 5.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 5.30 Wesley Impact With Stu Cameron. (PG, R)

6am Morning Programs. 7.30 Left Off The Map. (R) 8.00 My Market Kitchen. (R) 8.30 Pooches At Play. (R) 9.00 Freshly Picked. (R) 9.30 St10. (PG) 12.00 4x4 Adventures. (R) 1.00 All 4 Adventure. (PGal, R) 2.00 My Market Kitchen. (R) 2.30 Destination Dessert. (R) 3.00 What’s Up Down Under. 3.30 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 4.00 Taste Of Australia. (R) 4.30 Roads Less Travelled. (R) 5.00 News. 6.00 To Be Advised. 12.00 Home Shopping. (R) 5.00 Hour Of Power. Religious program.

ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.10pm Andy And The Band. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 QI. 8.30 Live At The Apollo. 9.15 Sammy J. 9.20 Whose Line Is It Anyway? 10.05 Penn & Teller: Fool Us. 10.45 Gavin & Stacey. 11.15 Schitt’s Creek. 11.40 Archer. Midnight Year Of The Rabbit. 12.25 The Young Offenders. 12.55 The Planets. 1.55 ABC News Update. 2.00 Close. 5.05 Little Princess. 5.15 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon Insight. 1.00 Front Up. 2.00 SBS Courtside. 2.30 Basketball. NBA. Washington Wizard v Los Angeles Lakers. 5.00 Lee Lin Chin’s Fashionista. 5.15 WorldWatch. 5.45 PBS News. 6.45 Extreme Food Phobics. 7.35 Impossible Engineering. 8.30 Secrets Of America’s Shadow Government. 9.20 Black Market. 10.10 The X-Files. 12.40am South Park. 1.30 King Of The Road. 2.20 Late Programs.

7TWO (72)

6am Morning Programs. 10.00 Winners. 11.00 Australia’s Best Backyards. 11.30 Sydney Weekender. 12.30pm Creek To Coast. 1.00 House Of Wellness. 2.00 The Great Outdoors: Greatest Escapes. 3.00 Selling Houses Aust. 4.00 Meghan & Harry: The Next Chapter. 5.00 Horse Racing. Chandon Ladies Day and Super Saturday. 6.00 Border Security: Int. 6.30 The Yorkshire Vet. 8.30 Escape To The Country. 11.30 Late Programs.

9GEM (92) 6am Morning Programs. 12.20pm MOVIE: The Cracksman. (1963) 2.35 MOVIE: Agatha Christie’s Evil Under The Sun. (1982, PG) 5.00 Rugby Union. Super W. Queensland Reds v Fijian Drua. 7.00 Customs. 7.30 Rugby Union. Super Rugby. Round 4. Queensland Reds v Fijian Drua. 9.45 Super Rugby Post-Match. 10.00 MOVIE: Donnie Brasco. (1997, MA15+) 12.30am Late Programs.

10 PEACH (11) 6am The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 7.00 The King Of Queens. 8.00 Frasier. 9.00 Becker. 10.00 The Middle. 11.00 The King Of Queens. Noon Australian Survivor. 3.00 Friends. 6.00 The Big Bang Theory. 10.15 Friends. 12.10am Home Shopping. 1.40 Mom. 2.35 Naked Beach. 3.30 Nancy Drew. 4.30 Home Shopping.

NITV (34)

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am

7MATE (73) 6am Morning Programs. 1pm Blokesworld. 1.30 The Food Dude. 2.00 Paralympic Winter Games Beijing 2022: Highlights. H’lights from the Winter Paralympics. 3.00 Football. AFL Women’s. Collingwood v Richmond. 5.00 MOVIE: Caddyshack. (1980, PG) 7.00 Football. AFL Women’s. Round 10. Melbourne v Carlton. 9.00 MOVIE: Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me. (1999, M) 11.05 Late Programs.

9GO! (93) 6am Children’s Programs. 1.30pm Peaking. 2.25 Race Across The World. 3.40 Ultimate Rush. 4.10 Soapbox Racing. Red Bull Series. Replay. 5.10 Road Trick. 5.40 MOVIE: The Flintstones. (1994) 7.30 MOVIE: The Truman Show. (1998, PG) 9.30 MOVIE: You, Me And Dupree. (2006, M) 11.40 Weird Science. 12.10am Flip It Like Disick. 2.10 Very Cavallari. 3.00 Power Rangers Dino Fury. 3.30 Thunderbirds. 4.30 Late Programs.

10 BOLD (12) 6am Morning Programs. 11.00 Bondi Rescue. Noon Jake And The Fatman. 1.00 JAG. 2.00 Diagnosis Murder. 3.00 Buy To Build. 3.30 Hotels By Design. 4.00 Bondi Rescue. 4.30 iFish Summer. 5.00 Escape Fishing. 5.30 Bondi Rescue. 6.00 Scorpion. 7.00 Soccer. A-League Men. Round 18. Macarthur FC V Western Sydney Wanderers. 10.00 The FBI Declassified. 11.00 Late Programs.

6am Morning Programs. 1.40pm Songlines On Screen. 2.00 Rugby Union. Ella 7s. 2.20 Ice Hockey. National Hockey Super League. 4.20 Over The Black Dot. 4.50 Rugby League. Koori Knockout. Newcastle Yowies v Cabbage Tree Island. Replay. 5.50 VICE World Of Sports. 6.20 Rivals. 6.50 News. 7.00 First People’s Kitchen. 7.30 How It Feels To Be Free. 9.40 MOVIE: The Descent 2. (2009, MA15+) 11.20 Late Programs.

PAGE 2

Frankston Times – TV Guide

Blinded By The Light. (2019, PG) 8.10 Remi Nobody’s Boy. (2018, PG, French) 10.10 A Separation. (2011, M, Farsi) 12.25pm Little Nicolas. (2009, PG, French) 2.05 Adam. (2019, PG) 4.00 Playtime. (1967, PG, French) 6.15 Big Fish. (2003, PG) 8.30 Booksmart. (2019, MA15+) 10.25 Curiosa. (2019, MA15+, French) 12.25am Tanna. (2015, M, Bislama) 2.20 Late Programs.

8 March 2022


Sunday, March 13 ABC (2)

SBS (3)

SEVEN (7)

NINE (9)

TEN (10)

6.00 Rage. (PG) 7.00 Weekend Breakfast. 9.00 Insiders. 10.00 Offsiders. 10.30 The World This Week. (R) 11.00 Compass. (PG, R) 11.30 Songs Of Praise. 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 12.30 Landline. 1.30 Gardening Australia. (R) 2.30 Australia Remastered. (R) 3.25 Love On The Spectrum. (PG, R) 4.30 Back In Time For Dinner. (PG, R) 5.30 Nigella At My Table. (Final, R)

6.00 WorldWatch. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 ABC America: World News Tonight. 1.00 Speedweek. 3.00 AusMoto Show. (Return) 3.30 The Rising. 4.30 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw Bitesize. (R) 4.40 Secrets Of Nazi U-Boat Bases. (PGa, R) 5.40 Secret Nazi Bases. (PGa, R)

6.00 NBC Today. 7.00 Weekend Sunrise. 10.00 The Morning Show: Weekend. (PG) 12.00 House Of Wellness. (PG, R) 1.00 Football. AFL Women’s. Round 10. St Kilda v Adelaide. 3.00 Football. AFL Women’s. Round 10. Western Bulldogs v Brisbane Lions. From Mars Stadium, Victoria. 5.00 Seven News At 5. 5.30 Border Security: Australia’s Front Line. (PG, R)

6.00 Easy Eats. (R) 7.00 Weekend Today. 10.00 Sports Sunday. (PG) 11.00 Women’s Footy. (PG) 12.00 Ultimate Rush. (PGl, R) 12.30 Bondi Lifeguard World Adventures. (PGl, R) 1.00 World’s Greatest Engineering Icons. (PG) 2.00 Serengeti. (PG, R) 3.00 Space Invaders. (PGa, R) 4.00 Bondi Vet. (PGm) 5.00 News: First At Five. 5.30 Postcards. (PG)

6.00 Mass. 6.30 Hillsong. 7.00 Joseph Prince. 7.30 Joel Osteen. 8.00 GCBC. (R) 8.30 What’s Up Down Under. (R) 9.00 Left Off The Map. (R) 9.30 St10. (PG) 12.00 Everyday Gourmet. (R) 12.30 Australian Survivor. (R) 1.45 To Be Advised. 3.00 Freshly Picked. (R) 3.30 Waltzing Jimeoin. (PGal, R) 4.00 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 4.30 Taste Of Australia. (R) 5.00 News.

6.00 Antiques Roadshow. 7.00 ABC News Sunday. 7.40 Grand Designs New Zealand. (PG) Hosted by Chris Moller. 8.30 Troppo. (Mal) A shocking revelation leads Amanda and Ted to focus their attention on Yoon Sun and Olivia as prime suspects. 9.25 Killing Eve. (MA15+v) 10.10 Miniseries: Patrick Melrose. (Mal, R) Part 5 of 5. 11.10 Harrow. (Mav, R) 12.05 Mum. (Ml, R) 12.35 Silent Witness. (Masv, R) 2.35 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 4.00 Horror Movie: A Low-Budget Nightmare. (Mal, R) 5.00 Insiders. (R)

6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Acropolis: The Ancient Builders. (PG) 8.30 Spain’s Secret Conquest. (PG) Part 1 of 2. 10.50 The Real Hunt For Red October. (PGa, R) 11.40 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. (Mals, R) 12.35 Great British Railway Journeys. (R) 1.10 Cycling. UCI World Tour. Paris-Nice Race. Final stage. 3.10 The Virus: What Went Wrong? (Mal, R) 4.45 Destination Flavour: Japan Bitesize. (R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.

6.00 Seven News. 7.00 Dancing With The Stars: All Stars. (PG) 8.30 Crime Investigation Australia: Baby In The Suitcase. (MA15+adv) Takes look at the murder of two-year-old Khandalyce Kiara Pearce, whose body was found in a suitcase. 9.50 Born To Kill? Donald Gaskins Jr “Pee Wee”. (MA15+av) A look at serial killer Donald Gaskins Jr. 10.55 Death Row: Countdown To Execution. (MA15+av) 12.00 The Proposal. (PGa, R) 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 3.30 Million Dollar Minute. (R) 4.00 NBC Today. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 Nine News Sunday. 7.00 Married At First Sight. (PGal) The social experiment continues. 8.50 60 Minutes. Current affairs program, investigating, analysing and uncovering the issues affecting all Australians. 9.50 Nine News Late. A look at the latest news and events. 10.20 Australian Crime Stories: The Queen Of Con. (Ma, R) 11.20 The First 48: Broken Home. (Malv) 12.10 Shallow Grave. (Mav, R) 1.00 Ultimate Rush. (Ml, R) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Believer’s Voice Of Victory. (PGa) 4.30 Take Two. (R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.

6.30 The Sunday Project. Panellists dissect, digest and reconstitute the daily news, events and hottest topics. 7.30 Australian Survivor. A group of castaways are in Far North Queensland, where they face challenges in the quest for the title of Sole Survivor. 9.00 FBI. (Mv) The team investigates an extremist gun group after an anti-gun lobbyist building is bombed. Bashar dangles a possible promotion for OA, but only if he can persuade Tiffany to not report an incident of misconduct. 11.00 The Sunday Project. (R) A look at the day’s news. 12.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.

ABC COMEDY (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.10pm Andy And The Band. 7.30 Compass. 8.00 You Can’t Ask That. 8.30 Louis Theroux’s Forbidden America. 9.35 The Exhibitionists. 10.35 Tate Britain’s Great British Walks. 11.20 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. 12.10am MOVIE: Infamous. (2006, M) 2.05 ABC News Update. 2.10 Close. 5.05 Little Princess. 5.15 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon Basketball. NBA. Washington Wizards v Los Angeles Lakers. Replay.s 2.00 Nuts And Bolts. 2.30 Look Me In The Eye. 3.30 WorldWatch. 4.00 Insight. 5.00 Lee Lin Chin’s Fashionista. 5.10 Unknown Amazon. 6.00 Speed With Guy Martin. 6.55 Lost Gold Of World War II. 7.40 Ice Cowboys. 8.30 The Story Of Late Night. 9.20 Atlantis Found. 10.55 Dark Side Of Football. 11.45 Late Programs.

7TWO (72)

6am Morning Programs. 9.00 Out Of The Blue. 9.30 Australia’s Best Backyards. 10.00 House Of Wellness. 11.00 NBC Today. Noon The Yorkshire Vet. 2.00 Caravan & Camping WA. 2.30 The Great Australian Doorstep. 3.00 Escape To The Country. 6.00 Dog Patrol. 7.00 Border Security. 8.30 Railroad Australia. 9.30 Hornby: A Model Empire. (Premiere) 10.30 Great Scenic Railway Journeys. 11.10 Late Programs.

9GEM (92) 6am Morning Programs. Noon Rugby League. NRL Women’s Premiership. Round 3. Brisbane Broncos v St George Illawarra Dragons. 1.50 Rugby League. NRL Women’s Premiership. Round 3. Parramatta Eels v Gold Coast Titans. 3.30 Rugby League. NRL. Round 1. Parramatta Eels v Gold Coast Titans. 6.00 Customs. 6.30 The Great Migration. 7.30 To Be Advised. 10.00 Chicago P.D. 11.00 Late Programs.

NITV (34)

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am

7MATE (73) 6am Morning Programs. 11.00 Fishing. IFS Championships. Replay. 11.30 Step Outside. Noon The Fishing Show By AFN. 1.00 Fishing Addiction. 2.00 Hook Me Up! 3.00 Ultimate Fishing. 4.00 Last Stop Garage. 4.30 Pawn Stars. 5.30 Pawn Stars South Africa. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 MOVIE: 2012. (2009, PG) 10.05 MOVIE: Commando. (1985, MA15+) 11.55 Late Programs.

9GO! (93) 6am Children’s Programs. 1.30pm Surfing Australia TV. 2.00 The Break Boys. 3.00 MOVIE: Pokémon The Movie: I Choose You! (2017, PG) 5.00 To Be Advised. 7.00 MOVIE: Johnny English Reborn. (2011, PG) 9.00 MOVIE: The Bourne Supremacy. (2004, M) 11.10 Allegiance. 12.10am Flip It Like Disick. 2.10 Below Deck. 3.00 Power Rangers Dino Fury. 3.30 Thunderbirds. 4.30 Teen Titans Go! 4.50 Late Programs.

6am Morning Programs. 11.15 Football. CAFL. 12.45pm Motor Racing. W Series. Round 5. Highlights. 1.15 Soccer. Serie A Femminile. 3.00 Rugby Union. Monsoon Rugby Union. 4.30 Softball. SA Premier League. 6.00 Going Native. 6.30 News. 6.40 Animal Babies: First Year On Earth. 7.40 Ice Cowboys. 8.40 Nadia. 10.10 Dwayne Wade: Life Unexpected. 11.55 Late Programs.

20

$

Big Fish. (2003, PG) 8.15 Toast. (2010, PG) 10.00 Playtime. (1967, PG, French) 12.15pm Brooklyn. (2015, M) 2.20 Remi Nobody’s Boy. (2018, PG, French) 4.20 The Boy And The Beast. (2015, PG) 6.30 Without A Clue. (1988, PG) 8.30 Another Round. (2020, M, Danish) 10.40 The Big Picture. (2010, M, French) 12.50am Calvary. (2014, MA15+) 2.45 Late Programs.

20 20

$$

ANY ANY

10 PEACH (11) 6am NBL Slam. 6.30 ALEGRIA PURCHASEThe ORDER DELIVERY ALEGRIA PURCHASE ORDER DELIVERY Big Bang Theory. 8.30 Neighbours. 10.30

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The Middle. Noon To Be Advised. 1.00 Basketball. CLICK & COLLECTv Illawarra CLICK & COLLECT NBL. Round 15. Tasmania JackJumpers Hawks. 3.00 Basketball. NBL. Round 15. South East MelbournePHONE Phoenix v&Melbourne United. 5.00 PHONE & COLLECT COLLECT Friends. 6.00 The Big Bang Theory. 8.30 Friends. Midnight Shopping. 1.30 Late Programs.

REFERRAL APPOINTMENTS REFERRAL APPOINTMENTS

10 BOLD (12) 6am Home Shopping. 7.30 Key Of David. 8.00 The Doctors. 9.00 Healthy Homes Australia. 9.30 Bondi Rescue. 10.00 iFish Summer Series. 10.30 Reel Action. 11.00 Escape Fishing With ET. 11.30 Beyond The Fire: Recovery. 12.30pm Scorpion. 2.30 Pooches At Play. 3.00 What’s Up Down Under. 3.30 Soccer. A-League Women. Semi-final. 6.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 9.25 NCIS: Los Angeles. 11.15 Late Programs.

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Monday, March 14 ABC TV (2)

SBS (3)

SEVEN (7)

NINE (9)

TEN (10)

6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 10.00 Landline. (R) 11.00 Antiques Roadshow. (R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 Death In Paradise. (Mdv, R) 2.10 Miniseries: The Teacher. (Mals, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.00 Escape From The City. (R) 4.55 Kurt Fearnley’s One Plus One. (R) 5.25 Hard Quiz. (PG, R) 6.00 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 Australian Story. Australians share their personal stories. 8.30 Four Corners. Investigative journalism program. 9.20 Media Watch. (PG) Hosted by Paul Barry. 9.35 China Tonight. A look at current affairs from China. 10.05 ABC News Video Lab. (R) 10.40 ABC Late News. 10.55 The Business. (R) 11.10 Q+A. (R) 12.15 Unforgotten. (Final, Malv, R) 1.05 Silent Witness. (MA15+av, R) 3.05 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 4.25 The Drum. (R) 5.25 7.30. (R)

6.00 WorldWatch. 8.40 French News TV5MONDE. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 ABC America: World News Tonight. 1.00 Al Jazeera News. 2.00 Travel Man’s Greatest Trips. (Mlns, R) 2.55 Hidden Algeria. (PGa, R) 3.55 Queen Victoria’s Children. (PG, R) 5.05 Jeopardy! (PG) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R) 6.00 Mastermind Australia. (PG) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Scotland: Escape To The Wilderness. (PG) 8.30 Royal History’s Myths And Secrets. (PG) Presented by Lucy Worsley. 9.35 The Great House Revival. (R) Presented by Hugh Wallace. 10.30 SBS World News Late. 11.05 Paris Police 1900. (Mav) 12.05 Tin Star. (Return, MA15+) 1.05 Unit One. (Malsv, R) 4.15 VICE Guide To Film. (MA15+a, R) 4.45 Destination Flavour: Japan Bitesize. (R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.

6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 6.00 Today. 6.00 The Talk. (PGa) 7.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 11.30 Seven Morning News. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 7.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG, R) 8.00 12.00 MOVIE: The Trip To 11.30 Morning News. Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PGal) 1.00 Bountiful. (2014, G, R) 12.00 Married At First Sight. (PGal, R) Australian Survivor. (R) 2.30 Entertainment 2.00 Motorway Patrol. (PG, R) 1.45 Explore: Hamilton Gardens. (R) Tonight. 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 3.30 2.30 Highway Cops. (PGl, R) 2.00 Pointless. (PG) Freshly Picked With Simon Toohey. 4.00 3.00 The Chase. 3.00 Tipping Point. (PG) Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 4.30 The Bold And The 4.00 Seven News At 4. 4.00 Afternoon News. Beautiful. (PGa) 5.00 The Chase Australia. 5.00 Millionaire Hot Seat. 5.00 10 News First. 6.00 Seven News. 6.00 Nine News. 6.30 The Project. A look at the 7.00 Home And Away. (PGa) 7.00 A Current Affair. day’s news and events. 7.30 SAS‘LARGEST’ Australia. (Mal) Celebri7.30 Married At First Sight. 7.30 Australian Survivor. THE SHOE STORE THE ‘LARGEST’ SHOE STORE ties undertake SAS training. The social by Jonathan LaPaglia. B A Yexperiment S I D E continues. B A Y S I DPresented E ONThe THE PENINSULA 8.40 Amazing Race. (PGl) ON THE PENINSULA 9.00 La Brea. (Mv) The search party 9.00 Would I Lie To You? Australia. The teams travel through Corsica, explores a mysterious fort that raises (PGl) Two teams go head-to-head France, where each team member more questions than answers. in a battle of wits that has them BAYSIDESHOES.COM.AU I 9785BAYSIDESHOES.COM.AU 1887 103 RAILWAY PARADE, I 9785 1887 SEAFORD I 103 RAILWAY PARADE, SEAFORD must try a piece of casu martzu. 10.00I Nine News Late. A look trying to fool the opposition. 10.40 The Latest: Seven News. at the latest news and events. 10.10 FBI: Most Wanted. (Mav, R) 11.10 The Resident. (Ma) A familiar 10.30 Footy Classified. (M) A cult leader goes on the run. patient returns to the ER. 11.30 Bluff City Law. (PGa, R) 11.00 The Project. (R) A look at 12.10 MOVIE: Inherent Vice. 12.15 Tipping Point. (PG, R) the day’s news and events. (2014, MA15+dns, R) Joaquin Phoenix. 1.05 Hello SA. (PG) 1.30 TV Shop: Home 12.00 The Late Show With 3.00 To Be Advised. Shopping. (R) 2.30 Global Shop. (R) 3.00 TV Stephen Colbert. (PG) 4.00 NBC Today. Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Believer’s 1.00 Home Shopping. (R) 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise. Voice Of Victory. (PGa) 4.30 A Current Affair. 4.30 CBS Mornings. (R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.

ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.10pm Andy And The Band. 7.30 The Planets. 8.30 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces. 9.20 Grand Designs. 10.10 The Greek Islands With Julia Bradbury. 10.30 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. 11.15 QI. 11.45 Whose Line Is It Anyway? 12.05am Escape From The City. 1.05 Community. 1.30 Parks And Recreation. 1.55 ABC News Update. 2.00 Close. 5.05 Little Princess. 5.15 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am Morning Programs. 10.00 NBA. Indiana Pacers v Atlanta Hawks. 12.30pm Lethal Ladies: NZ Female Fighters. 12.55 MOVIE: The Big Squeeze. (2021, M) 2.05 World Of VICE. 2.30 Does America. 3.00 Sloths Save The World. 3.30 Dead Set On Life. 3.55 WorldWatch. 5.15 Joy Of Painting. 5.45 Shortland St. 6.15 Alone. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.30 News. 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats. 8.30 Taskmaster. 9.25 Derry Girls. 10.25 Late Programs.

7TWO (72)

6am Home Shopping. 6.30 Travel Oz. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. 10.30 Better Homes And Gardens. Noon Harry And Meghan: The First Tour. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 Weekender. 2.30 Sons And Daughters. 4.30 Hornby: A Model Empire. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Doc Martin. 8.30 A Touch Of Frost. 10.50 Cold Case. 11.50 Late Programs.

9GEM (92) 6am TV Shop. 7.00 Creflo. 7.30 TV Shop. 9.30 Newstyle Direct. 10.00 Danoz. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon Days Of Our Lives. 12.55 The Young And The Restless. 1.50 World’s Greatest Natural Wonders. 2.50 Antiques Roadshow. 3.20 MOVIE: The Rebel. (1961) 5.30 Murder, She Wrote. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 Agatha Raisin. 8.30 Poirot. 10.30 Law & Order. 11.30 Late Programs.

10 PEACH (11) 6am Basketball. NBL. Round 15. South East Melbourne Phoenix v Melbourne United. Replay. 8.00 Friends. 10.00 The Middle. 11.30 Seinfeld. Noon The King Of Queens. 1.00 Becker. 2.00 27th Annual Critics’ Choice Awards. 5.00 Frasier. 6.00 Friends. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.00 Friends. 8.00 The Big Bang Theory. 9.30 Seinfeld. 11.00 Mom. Midnight Shopping. 1.30 Late Programs.

NITV (34)

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am

7MATE (73)

9GO! (93) 6am Children’s Programs. Noon MOVIE: Win A Date With Tad Hamilton! (2004, PG) 2.00 Social Fabric. 3.00 Children’s Programs. 3.30 Raymond. 5.30 The Nanny. 6.00 3rd Rock. 6.30 That ’70s Show. 7.00 Young Sheldon. 7.30 RBT. 8.00 Territory Cops. 8.30 MOVIE: Killers. (2010, M) 10.30 Young Sheldon. 11.00 Raymond. 11.30 Weird Science. Midnight #Killerpost. 1.00 Below Deck. 2.00 Late Programs.

10 BOLD (12) 6am Home Shopping. 8.00 Soccer. A-League Men. Round 18. Macarthur FC V Western Sydney Wanderers. Replay. 10.30 Bondi Rescue. 11.00 Diagnosis Murder. Noon JAG. 1.00 Pat Callinan’s 4x4 Adventures. 2.00 Bondi Rescue. 3.00 Jake And The Fatman. 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 JAG. 6.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 10.20 A-League Highlights Show. 11.20 NCIS: New Orleans. 12.15am Shopping. 2.15 Late Programs.

6am Morning Programs. 1.30pm Going Native. 2.00 Shortland St. 2.30 Chefs’ Line. 3.00 Bushwhacked! 3.25 The Magic Canoe. 3.50 Wolf Joe. 4.00 Aussie Bush Tales. 4.10 Grace Beside Me. 4.35 Mustangs FC. 5.00 Our Stories. 5.30 APTN National News. 6.00 Bamay. 6.40 News. 6.50 Land Of Primates. 7.40 Through The Wormhole With Morgan Freeman. 8.30 Karla Grant Presents. 9.30 Colony. 11.10 Late Programs.

Morning Programs. 8.45 Without A Clue. (1988, PG) 10.45 The Boy And The Beast. (2015, PG) 12.55pm Checkered Ninja. (2018, M) 2.25 Big Fish. (2003, PG) 4.40 Asterix: The Mansions Of The Gods. (2014, PG, French) 6.15 Capricorn One. (1978, PG) 8.30 Whiplash. (2014, MA15+) 10.30 Young And Beautiful. (2013, MA15+, French) 12.10am Late Programs.

SHOES SHOES

6am Morning Programs. 1pm Secrets Of The World’s Super Skyscrapers. 2.00 Pawn Stars South Africa. 2.30 Last Stop Garage. 3.00 Wild Transport. 3.30 Shipping Wars. 4.00 Pawn Stars South Africa. 4.30 Motor Racing. Supercars Support 5.30 Storage Wars: TX. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 American Pickers. 8.30 MOVIE: The Dark Knight Rises. (2012, M) 11.50 Late Programs.

Frankston Times – TV Guide

8 March 2022

PAGE 3


Tuesday, March 15 ABC (2)

SBS (3)

SEVEN (7)

NINE (9)

TEN (10)

6.00 News. 9.00 News. 10.00 Foreign Correspondent. (R) 10.30 Rosie Batty’s One Plus One. (R) 11.10 Grand Designs New Zealand. (PG, R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 All Creatures Great And Small. (Final, PG, R) 2.05 Unforgotten. (Final, Malv, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.00 Escape From The City. (R) 4.55 Kurt Fearnley’s One Plus One. (R) 5.25 Hard Quiz. (PG, R)

6.00 WorldWatch. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 ABC America: World News Tonight. 1.00 PBS NewsHour. (R) 2.00 Travel Man’s Greatest Trips. (Mas, R) 2.55 Hidden Algeria. (PG, R) 3.55 The Royal House Of Windsor. (PGa, R) 5.05 Jeopardy! (PG) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R)

6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Forgotten Evil. (2017, Mav, R) 2.00 The Real Manhunter. (Madv, R) 3.00 The Chase. 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia.

6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 Married At First Sight. (R) 1.30 Getaway. (PG, R) 2.00 Pointless. (PG) 3.00 Tipping Point. (PG) 4.00 Afternoon News. 5.00 Millionaire Hot Seat.

6.00 The Talk. (PGa) 7.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 7.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PGa, R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PGal) 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.00 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. (R) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 3.30 Freshly Picked With Simon Toohey. 4.00 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG) 5.00 10 News First.

6.00 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 Outback Ringer. (Final, PG) The wet season looms. 8.30 Freddie Mercury: The Final Act. (Ml) The story of Freddie Mercury’s final chapter. 10.00 You Can’t Ask That: HIV Positive. (Mals, R) 10.35 ABC Late News. 10.50 The Business. (R) 11.10 Four Corners. (R) 11.55 Media Watch. (PG, R) 12.10 Press. (Mals, R) 1.10 Silent Witness. (MA15+av, R) 4.10 First Nation Farmers. (R) 4.25 The Drum. (R) 5.25 7.30. (R)

6.00 Mastermind Australia. (PG) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Great British Railway Journeys: Oxford To Abingdon. (Return, PG) 8.30 Insight. Presented by Kumi Taguchi. 9.30 Dateline. (Return) Evan Williams reports on China’s Kazakhs. 10.00 The Feed. 10.30 SBS World News Late. 11.00 The Point. (R) 11.30 Shadow Lines. (Malnv) 12.25 Transplant. (MA15+a, R) 4.30 VICE Guide To Film. (MA15+sv, R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.

6.00 Seven News. 7.00 Home And Away. (PGa) 7.30 SAS Australia. (M) Celebrities undertake SAS training. 8.30 The Rookie. (Mav) Officers Chen and Bradford demand a treasure hunt rematch and enlist Officer Grey to set the terms. 10.30 The Latest: Seven News. 11.00 MOVIE: Sudden Impact. (1983, MA15+alsv, R) A detective investigates a series of murders. Clint Eastwood. 1.30 Absentia. (MA15+av, R) 2.30 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 NBC Today. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 Married At First Sight. The social experiment continues. 9.00 The Hundred With Andy Lee. (Ms) Comedy panel show. 10.00 Nine News Late. 10.30 Footy Classified. (M) 11.30 Mr Mayor. (PG) 12.00 Tipping Point. (PG, R) 12.50 Talking Honey: Relationship Specials. (PG) 1.05 Delish. (R) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Believer’s Voice Of Victory. (PGa) 4.30 A Current Affair. (R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.

6.30 The Project. A look at the day’s news and events. 7.30 The Dog House Australia. Narrated by Dr Chris Brown. 8.30 NCIS. The team is summoned to Philadelphia to investigate the death of a US Navy petty officer. 9.30 NCIS: Los Angeles. After a newborn child is found abandoned on a US Navy ship, Kensi and Deeks search for the mother. 10.30 NCIS. (M, R) A musician’s murder is investigated. 11.30 The Project. (R) 12.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) 1.30 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.

ABC COMEDY (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.10pm Andy And The Band. 7.30 Spicks And Specks. 8.00 Would I Lie To You? 8.30 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. 9.15 Whose Line Is It Anyway? 9.35 Gavin & Stacey. 10.05 Schitt’s Creek. 10.30 The Office. 11.00 Starstruck. 11.25 Whose Line Is It Anyway? 12.10am Plebs. 12.30 Community. 12.55 Parks And Recreation. 1.20 Dawn French Live: 30 Million Minutes. 3.20 Close. 5.05 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon Basketball. NBA. Indiana Pacers v Atlanta Hawks. Replay. 2.00 Rum: The Thirsty Road. 2.30 Outsider: World’s Weirdest Films. 3.00 Video Game Show. 3.50 WorldWatch. 5.15 Joy Of Painting. 5.45 Shortland St. 6.15 Alone. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats. 8.30 Inside The Christchurch Mosque Attack. 9.35 Undercover Asia: South Korea’s Debt. 10.30 Late Programs.

7TWO (72)

6am Home Shopping. 6.30 Travel Oz. 8.00 Harry’s Practice. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. Noon Billy Connolly & Me: A Celebration. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 Creek To Coast. 2.30 Sons And Daughters. 4.30 Harry And Meghan: Royal Rebels. 5.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Pie In The Sky. 8.30 Foyle’s War. 10.40 Without A Trace. 12.45am Crazy On A Plane. 2.00 Late Programs.

9GEM (92) 6am TV Shop. 7.00 Creflo. 7.30 TV Shop. 9.30 Newstyle Direct. 10.00 Danoz. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon Days Of Our Lives. 12.55 The Young And The Restless. 1.50 The Bill. 3.00 Antiques Roadshow. 3.30 MOVIE: Not Now, Comrade. (1976, PG) 5.30 Murder, She Wrote. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 New Tricks. 8.40 The Closer. 9.40 Rizzoli & Isles. 10.40 Late Programs.

10 PEACH (11) 6am The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 7.00 The King Of Queens. 8.00 Seinfeld. 9.00 Becker. 10.00 The Middle. 11.00 Frasier. Noon Instinct. 1.00 Mom. 2.00 Seinfeld. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Becker. 5.00 Frasier. 6.00 Friends. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.00 Friends. 8.00 The Big Bang Theory. 9.30 Mom. Midnight Shopping. 1.30 Stephen Colbert. 2.30 James Corden. 3.30 Instinct. 4.30 Shopping.

NITV (34)

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am

7MATE (73) 6am Morning Programs. 1pm Secrets Of The World’s Super Skyscrapers. 2.00 Billion Dollar Wreck. 3.00 Wild Transport. 3.30 Shipping Wars. 4.00 Fish’n With Mates. 4.30 Barter Kings. 5.00 The Mike & Cole Show. 5.30 Storage Wars: TX. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 Highway Patrol. 8.30 Outback Truckers. 10.30 Aussie Lobster Men. 11.30 Late Programs.

9GO! (93) 6am Children’s Programs. Noon Xena. 2.00 Hercules. 3.00 The Nanny. 3.30 3rd Rock. 4.00 That ’70s Show. 4.30 Raymond. 5.30 The Nanny. 6.00 3rd Rock. 6.30 That ’70s Show. 7.00 Young Sheldon. 7.30 RBT. 8.00 Territory Cops. 8.30 MOVIE: Sicario: Day Of The Soldado. (2018, MA15+) 11.00 Young Sheldon. 11.30 Raymond. Midnight #Killerpost. 1.00 Below Deck. 2.50 Late Programs.

10 BOLD (12) 6am Home Shopping. 8.00 A-League Highlights Show. 9.00 Jake And The Fatman. 10.00 Diagnosis Murder. 11.00 JAG. Noon NCIS. 1.00 Walker, Texas Ranger. 3.00 Jake And The Fatman. 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 JAG. 6.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 Bull. 12.15am Home Shopping. 2.15 MOVIE: Braven. (2018, M) 4.10 Walker, Texas Ranger. 5.05 JAG.

6am Morning Programs. 2pm Shortland St. 2.30 Chefs’ Line. 3.00 Jarjums. 3.25 The Magic Canoe. 3.50 Wolf Joe. 4.00 Aussie Bush Tales. 4.10 Grace Beside Me. 4.35 Mustangs FC. 5.00 Our Stories. 5.30 Indian Country Today. 6.00 Bamay. 6.30 News. 6.40 Arctic Secrets. 7.30 The Point. 8.00 Wellington Paranormal. 8.30 Over The Black Dot. 9.00 Yokayi Footy. 9.55 MOVIE: The Final Quarter. (2019, PG) 11.20 Late Programs.

Morning Programs. 9.25 Richard The Stork. (2017) 11.00 The Big Picture. (2010, M, French) 1.10pm Without A Clue. (1988, PG) 3.10 The Three Musketeers. (1973, PG) 5.10 The Secret Of Kells. (2009, PG) 6.40 The Importance Of Being Earnest. (1952) 8.30 Vicky Cristina Barcelona. (2008, M) 10.15 Anthony Zimmer. (2005, M, French) 11.55 Late Programs.

ADJUSTABLE MASSAGE BED by

Wednesday, March 16 ABC TV (2)

SBS (3)

SEVEN (7)

NINE (9)

TEN (10)

6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News Mornings. 10.00 Four Corners. (R) 11.00 And We Danced. (R) 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 12.30 National Press Club Address. 1.40 Media Watch. (PG, R) 2.00 Press. (Mals, R) 3.00 ABC News Afternoons. 4.00 Escape From The City. (R) 4.55 Kurt Fearnley’s One Plus One. (R) 5.25 Hard Quiz. (PG, R) 6.00 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 Hard Quiz. (PG) 8.30 Shaun Micallef’s MAD AS HELL. (M) Hosted by Shaun Micallef. 9.00 Starstruck. (Ml) Tom and Jessie are both offered jobs. 9.25 QI. (PG) Hosted by Sandi Toksvig. 10.00 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. (R) 10.40 ABC Late News. 10.55 The Business. (R) 11.10 Killing Eve. (MA15+v, R) 11.55 Press. (Mal, R) 12.55 Miniseries: Patrick Melrose. (Mal, R) 1.55 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. (R) 2.35 Silent Witness. (Mav, R) 3.35 Rage. (MA15+adhlnsv) 4.25 The Drum. (R) 5.25 7.30. (R)

6.00 WorldWatch. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 11.30 Turkish News. 12.00 Arabic News F24. 12.30 ABC America: World News Tonight. 1.00 PBS NewsHour. (R) 2.00 Dateline. (R) 2.30 Insight. (R) 3.30 The Cook Up With Adam Liaw Bitesize. (R) 3.35 Going Places With Ernie Dingo. (R) 4.10 The Royal House Of Windsor. (PG, R) 5.05 Jeopardy! (PG) 5.30 Letters And Numbers. (R) 6.00 Mastermind Australia. (PG) 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Michael Mosley’s Health Intervention. (M) 8.30 Life On The Outside. (M) Part 1 of 3. 9.30 The Responder. (Premiere, MA15+) A cop tries to help a young addict. 10.40 SBS World News Late. 11.10 In Therapy. (Mal) 12.00 The Handmaid’s Tale. (Malsv, R) 12.55 The Good Fight. (Mals, R) 1.55 Before We Die. (Mdlv, R) 4.05 VICE Guide To Film. (Malnv, R) 4.55 Destination Flavour: Japan Bitesize. (R) 5.00 France 24 Feature. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.

6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. (PG) 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Hometown Killer. (2018, Mav, R) 2.00 Autopsy USA: Steve McQueen. (Ma, R) 3.00 The Chase. (R) 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia. 6.00 Seven News. 6.30 AFL Pre-Game Show. Pre-game coverage of the match. 7.00 Football. AFL. Round 1. Melbourne v Western Bulldogs. 9.45 The Front Bar. (M) Hosts Mick Molloy, Sam Pang and Andy Maher take a lighter look at the world of sport. 10.45 The Latest: Seven News. 11.15 Autopsy USA: Florence Ballard. (Mad) A look at the death of Florence Ballard. 12.15 Splitting Up Together. (PG, R) 2.00 Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 NBC Today. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.

6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. (PG) 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 Married At First Sight. (R) 1.30 My Way. 2.00 Pointless. (PG) 3.00 Tipping Point. (PG) 4.00 Afternoon News. 5.00 Millionaire Hot Seat. 6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 Married At First Sight. The social experiment continues. 9.00 Under Investigation: Putin The Tyrant. Presented by Liz Hayes. 10.00 Nine News Late. 10.30 Forensics: The Real CSI. (Mv) 11.40 Grand Hotel. (Msv, R) 12.30 Tipping Point. (PG, R) 1.20 Talking Honey: Relationship Specials. (R) 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 2.30 Global Shop. (R) 3.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. (R) 4.00 Believer’s Voice Of Victory. (PGa) 4.30 A Current Affair. (R) 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.

6.00 The Talk. (PGa) 7.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 7.30 Bold. (PG, R) 8.00 Studio 10. (PG) 12.00 Dr Phil. (PGa) 1.00 Ambulance Australia. (Mdlm, R) 2.00 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. (R) 3.00 Judge Judy. (PG, R) 3.30 Freshly Picked With Simon Toohey. 4.00 Farm To Fork. (PG, R) 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. (PG) 5.00 10 News First. 6.30 The Project. A look at the day’s news and events. 7.30 Ambulance Australia. (Maln) Paramedics fear a patient may have spinal cord injuries after a crash. 8.30 Bull. (Ma) Bull helps an agoraphobic client bring a wrongful death suit against the alleged killer of his beloved aunt. 10.30 This Is Us. (PGa) Jack goes to Marilyn’s funeral and is surprised when the Big Three unexpectedly arrive at the church. 11.30 The Project. (R) 12.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. (PG) 1.30 Home Shopping. (R) 4.30 CBS Mornings.

ABC TV PLUS (22) 6am Children’s Programs. 7.10pm Andy And The Band. 7.30 Anh’s Brush With Fame. 8.00 Art Works. 8.30 Tate Britain’s Great British Walks. 9.15 Fake Or Fortune? 10.15 Keeping Australia Safe. 11.15 Louis Theroux’s Forbidden America. 12.20am Community. 12.50 Parks And Recreation. 1.10 ABC News Update. 1.15 Close. 5.05 Little Princess. 5.15 Hoot Hoot Go! 5.20 Pingu In The City. 5.30 Late Programs.

SBS VICELAND (31) 6am WorldWatch. Noon Payday. 1.40 Noisey. 2.30 Motherboard. 3.00 Earthworks. 3.50 WorldWatch. 5.15 Joy Of Painting. 5.45 Shortland St. 6.15 Alone. 7.05 Jeopardy! 7.35 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown. 8.30 Wellington Paranormal. 9.30 MOVIE: Once Were Warriors. (1994, MA15+) 11.25 MOVIE: Ill Manors. (2012, MA15+) 1.35am The Source. 2.25 France 24. 3.00 Late Programs.

7TWO (72)

6am Morning Programs. 8.30 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. Noon Billy Connolly: Made In Scotland. 1.00 Million Dollar Minute. 2.00 Sydney Weekender. 2.30 Sons And Daughters. 4.30 Australia’s Deadliest. 5.00 Escape To The Country. 6.00 Bargain Hunt. 7.00 Home And Away. 7.30 The Coroner. 8.30 Ms Fisher’s Modern Murder Mysteries. 9.30 Frankie Drake Mysteries. 11.30 Late Programs.

9GEM (92) 6am TV Shop: Home Shopping. 7.00 Creflo Dollar Ministries. 7.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 10.30 Pointless. 11.30 My Favorite Martian. Noon Days Of Our Lives. 12.55 The Young And The Restless. 1.50 The Bill. 3.00 Antiques Roadshow. 3.30 MOVIE: The Iron Maiden. (1963) 5.30 Murder, She Wrote. 6.30 Antiques Roadshow. 7.30 As Time Goes By. 8.50 Midsomer Murders. 10.50 House. 11.50 Late Programs.

10 PEACH (11) 6am The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 7.00 Frasier. 8.00 The King Of Queens. 9.00 Becker. 10.00 The Middle. 11.00 Frasier. Noon Instinct. 1.00 The Big Bang Theory. 1.30 Friends. 2.30 NBL Slam. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Becker. 5.00 Frasier. 6.00 Friends. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.00 Friends. 8.00 The Big Bang Theory. 10.10 Mom. Midnight Shopping. 1.30 Stephen Colbert. 2.30 Late Programs.

NITV (34)

SBS WORLD MOVIES (32) 6am

7MATE (73)

9GO! (93) 6am Children’s Programs. Noon Xena. 2.00 Hercules. 3.00 The Nanny. 3.30 3rd Rock. 4.00 That ’70s Show. 4.30 Raymond. 5.30 The Nanny. 6.00 3rd Rock. 6.30 That ’70s Show. 7.00 Young Sheldon. 7.30 RBT. 8.00 Territory Cops. 8.30 MOVIE: Rush Hour. (1998, M) 10.30 Young Sheldon. 11.00 Raymond. 11.30 Weird Science. Midnight #Killerpost. 1.00 Below Deck. 2.50 Late Programs.

10 BOLD (12) 6am Home Shopping. 8.00 iFish Summer Series. 8.30 Bondi Rescue. 9.00 Jake And The Fatman. 10.00 Diagnosis Murder. 11.00 JAG. Noon NCIS. 1.00 Walker, Texas Ranger. 3.00 Jake And The Fatman. 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 JAG. 6.00 Bondi Rescue. 7.30 NCIS. 8.30 NCIS: Los Angeles. 10.20 FBI: Most Wanted. 11.15 FBI. 12.10am Shopping. 2.10 48 Hours. 3.10 Diagnosis Murder. 4.05 Late Programs.

6am Morning Programs. 1.30pm Merchants Of The Wild. 2.00 Shortland St. 2.30 Chefs’ Line. 3.00 Bushwhacked! 3.25 The Magic Canoe. 3.50 Wolf Joe. 4.00 Aussie Bush Tales. 4.10 Grace Beside Me. 4.35 Mustangs FC. 5.00 Our Stories. 5.30 Te Ao With Moana. 6.00 Bamay. 6.30 News. 6.40 Arctic Secrets. 7.30 Country Music. 8.30 Going Native. 9.00 Hunting Aotearoa. 9.30 Nadia. 11.00 Late Programs.

PAGE 4

Frankston Times – TV Guide

Morning Programs. 7.20 The Importance Of Being Earnest. (1952) 9.10 Capricorn One. (1978, PG) 11.25 Asterix: The Mansions Of The Gods. (2014, PG, French) 1pm The Cowboys. (2015, M, French) 3.00 Richard The Stork. (2017) 4.35 A United Kingdom. (2016, PG) 6.40 An Ideal Husband. (1999, PG) 8.30 Birdman. (2014, MA15+) 10.30 The Long Good Friday. (1980, MA15+) 12.35am Late Programs.

8 March 2022

6am Morning Programs. 11.00 America’s Game. Noon Outback Truckers. 1.00 Harbour Cops. 2.00 Billion Dollar Wreck. 3.00 Wild Transport. 3.30 Shipping Wars. 4.00 Fish’n With Mates. 4.30 Barter Kings. 5.00 Portland Charter Boat Wars. (Premiere) 5.30 Storage Wars: TX. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 8.30 Storage Wars. 9.30 Desert Collectors. 10.00 American Restoration. 10.50 Late Programs.


WHAT’S NEW...

The Mornington Great Outdoor and 4x4 Expo LOVE the Outdoors? Then the Mornington Great Outdoor and 4x4 Expo is for you. A large selection of local and interstate exhibitors will be on site for the event, which starts on Thursday the 10th of March, 11am – 5.00pm, and runs over Friday the 11th 10am – 5pm, Saturday the 12th 10.00am – 5.00pm, and Sunday the 13th 10.00am – 4.00pm. This four day event – to be held at Mornington Racecourse will showcase everything from the latest in caravans, campervans and camper trailers, 4wd’s and 4x4 accessories to metal detectors, boats as well as fishing gear, demonstrations and activities for the whole family. “We are really excited to be back here at Mornington Racecourse; this event will be one of the first events to return coming out of Covid restrictions. At this stage, the Government has specified that only double vaxed people will be allowed into events and proof will need to be shown ” says Richard Hiscock, the Exhibition Manager of The Great Outdoor and 4x4 Expo. This year’s Expo will also include camping gear, holiday and adventure destinations, gold detecting and a unique range of outdoor furniture. There are bargains galore available at The Gippsland Great Outdoor and 4x4 Expo. Many exhibitors will be offering show specials, so make sure you drop in and grab yourself a bargain. “There is a lot to see, including demonstrations and activities for the whole family.

The Great Outdoor and 4x4 Expo is running over March 10 – 13 at Mornington Racecourse.

We think it’s a fantastic day out for everyone” said Mr Hiscock. Who is at the Expo? Interested in Caravans and Camping? The extensive list of exhibitors include Ian Grants Caravans, Hilltop Caravans, Masterpiece Caravans, Vacationer Caravans, Fantasy Caravans, Cub Campers, and many others. If it is a camper trailer you are looking for we are well represented

Mornington Expo 2022 Site Map and Exhibitor Guide

Site

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Racecourse Road Mornington

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Car Park Entry

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If you are an experienced caravan or

47 & 6 7 U93 3 8 13 9 14 10 2 15 11 16 17 1 20 18 21 27 28 22 23 41 45 24 29 42 25 30 46 31 34 43 32 35 47 36 37 38 39 40 4

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What Can You Do There?

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by Cub Campers, Starvision Campers, Goldfields Campers, and many more. A large variety of boutique companies will also be exhibiting their wares. 4WD enthusiasts will also find lots to love about the Expo, as they will be able to view the latest in 4x4 equipment.

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EXPO ENTRY

Exhibitor sites undercover

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Exhibitor sites

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camper looking to upgrade, or a first timer there is something for everyone at the Mornington Great Outdoor and 4x4 Expo. If it is information that you are looking for be it fishing, boating, and the do’s and don’ts of camping then come along and talk to the experts. Where is the Expo? March 10 – 13 Mornington Racecourse, Racecourse Rd Mornington.

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Ezytrail Campers

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Catering

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Fin Campers

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Conqueror 4 x 4

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Utow Caravans Wigley Engineering

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Centaur Products Australia

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Under Covidsafe Victorian Government rules, all exhibitors and visitors will need to bring proof of Covid Vaccination to enter the expo.

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Lowerelec Led Lights

U1

Uber Gas Bag

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TBA

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Motor Money Finance

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Jumply

MW Toolbox

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Medibank

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Adjusta Mattress

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Bettergrip Tools

Jeff Wignall Ford

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Roofnest Australia

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Step Flex Orthotics

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Xtend Outdoors

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Escape RVS Masterpiece Caravans Urban Caravans Silver Valley Caravans

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Hardkorr Campers

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Frontline Campers

U7, U8, U9, U14, VTackle Fishing Gear U15 & U16

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Jungle 4 x 4

U10 & U11 Ecostar Double Glazing

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Next Gen Caravans Knox Family Caravans

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Mornington 4x4

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Step Flex

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23Zero Evakool

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Showdem Massager

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Lovells – GVM/GCM & Towing Upgrades Offroad Animal

U22

The Peter MacCallum Cancer Foundation

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GVB Motor Group PL

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Power of the Bee/ Beeswax Balm

Isuzu

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Weyhill farm Garlic Salts

Mitsubishi

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Smartvac Containers

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Star Vision Pty Ltd

U28 & U29 Salami Shack

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Transport Safety Victoria

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Bupa

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Newstyle Direct

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TBA

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Whitsunday Is. Charters Charter Yachts Australia

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Slot Me In

U34 - U36 Minelab Metal Detectors

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Lithium Lab

U37 & U38 4WD Victoria

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Filko Cleaning Products

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TBA

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My Fire

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Turmerix

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Lyal Eales

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Weigh Station

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Affordable Camping Mats Ozi Block N Chock

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Craft Sodas

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Award RV Superstore

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Toyota Land Cruiser of Australia - Victoria

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Relens Showbags

Catering Area

Callipari Wine Wine Selectors

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Aura Caravans

Open: Thursday 11am to 5pm Friday 10am to 5pm Saturday 10am to 5pm Sunday 10am to 4pm Adults $16, Concessions $13, and Under 16s are free. Eftpos available for entry.

Patriot Campers Lifestyle Campers Camping Adventures Australia PL

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Bushtracker Off Road Caravans

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Bellarine Caravans

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Ocam 4 x 4 Accessories

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Stockman Products

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Silverback Campers

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Lagoon Caravans

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Vacationer Caravans

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Sundowner RV Hilltop Caravans

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Rhino 4 x 4

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Fair Dinkum Caravans

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Crusader Caravans

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Atlantic Caravans Serenity Caravans Ourvan RV

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Donway Caravans Millard Caravans

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Supreme & Leader Caravans

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Maverick Campers

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Fantasy Caravan

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Takacat Boats and Kayaks Port River Marine Services PL

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Stoney Creek Campers

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Hillbilly Camping Gear

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Austrack Campers

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Tonys Tackle

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Emuwing PL

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Newstyle Direct

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Track Trailer Harvey Technology

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Dr Drum

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The Little Spanish Grater Plate

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CUB Campers Rhinomax Campers Trayon Campers Melbourne Camper Trailer Centre

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Halls Hats

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Razorback 4 x 4

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Hema Maps

U20 & U21 Show TV LTD

Stay in the know about The Great Outdoor and 4X4 Expo Follow us on Facebook @

thegreatoutdoorexpos.com.au

UPCOMING EXPOS

BALLARAT 6 - 8 MAY 2022

The Mornington Great Outdoor and 4X4 Expo Visitor Guide 2022 A3 folded to A4 Brochure Inside Print.indd 1

MILDURA 24 - 26 JUNE 2022

Frankston Times

8 March 2022

PAGE 15

27/02/2022 2:00:57 PM


LETTERS

Letters - 300 words maximum and including full name, address and contact number - can be sent to The News, PO Box 588, Hastings 3915 or emailed to: team@mpnews.com.au

State money needed for overpass to start Nepean MP Chris Brayne’s demands the federal money promised for the development of the Jetty Road, Rosebud overpass by Flinders MP Greg Hunt (“Reason revealed” Letters 2/3/22). Yet Mr Brayne will not discuss what the state government and [Premier] Dan Andrews are prepared to contribute financially to the development? Who is responsible for the M11? State or federal government? Mr Brayne implies that it is the federal government’s responsibility with no commitment from the state government. Ironically, no development can commence without state government and VicRoads approval. For this development to go ahead it needs Mr Brayne’s state Labor government to give it the go-ahead and contribute financially. Which he continually avoids addressing. Dan Andrews is a big spender on safety crossings throughout Melbourne. Has he been informed that the design of the M11 terminus requires pedestrians (children, the elderly and disabled) to cross a freeway? There is no other option, and it is a vehicle bottleneck. This is Mr Brayne’s government’s responsibility to correct the faulty planning (who was responsible for this error in planning and design?). There is a pledge for federal funding, now the state government needs to contribute financially or match this federal funding and commence the development. Michelle Smith, Rosebud

Australia’s ‘laziest MP’ After three years of inaction on his behalf, I’m calling [Nepean MP] Chris Brayne the laziest MP in Australia. He is a state Labor MP who refuses to stand up for the Mornington Peninsula or even to spend federal funds to save lives on our local roads. The federal government has had $75 million on the table for three years for the Jetty Road [Rosebud] intersection with the Mornington Peninsula Freeway – and $20 million for the Uralla Road and Forest Drive intersections with Nepean Highway in Mount Martha. This is money that is ready to go for state projects that will save lives. At the end of the day instead of fighting to get his own team to match these funds and get the Jetty Road project done, Mr Brayne has wasted three years making excuses why his state Labor government is refusing to build the road and has failed to deliver a dollar for the project. That’s because only he and his government can actually use the federal funding to build their own road projects and refuse to do so. Pretty simple, it’s ready to go and his government that owns and approves the road projects is ignoring the peninsula and abandoning local residents. These roads are death traps and after 20 years I’m sad to say that Mr Brayne is a Labor MP in a Labor state government who refuses to use federal money to protect his local people. In my observation, he is the laziest and worst

ADJUSTABLE MASSAGE BED by

PAGE 16

Frankston Times

8 March 2022

MP I’ve seen in that time. A word of advice [for] Chris: Just do it. Get the roads built and stop making despicable excuses for your own utter inaction while people’s lives are at risk. Greg Hunt, Liberal MP for Flinders

Reef studies needed I write to express grave concern at a reported proposal to create an artificial reef at Point Nepean (“Artificial reef off Point Nepean” The News 21/2/22). I cannot imagine that such a proposal in this precious area of Port Phillip would be even considered until detailed studies had been undertaken and made public. Melbourne and Monash universities are currently undertaking a number of studies of the marine environment around this area and plans are in process for a marine studies centre in the Point Nepean National Park. Perhaps some of these experts can be consulted about any proposal for an artificial reef? I look forward to being assured that any such proposal will only be considered after extensive marine studies and the pic have been explored. Joy Kitch, Blairgowrie

Pay to park A little birdie has told me that Mornington Peninsula Shire is moving forward on a paid parking scheme. My fear is that it will require a lot of yellow chalk and also charge ratepayers who have already paid for the parking facilities to have to pay for parking. There are ways around this problem and people have made proposals as to how to avoid making ratepayers pay for parking while at the same time adding untold wealth to the budget with a very low cost high revenue process. Contact your councillor(s) and make sure they understand that paid parking for ratepayers is not on, and it will be an election issue. Unfortunately, now that [shire] officers cannot be questioned in public at council meetings we do not have a clue what is being proposed or the details of the proposals for anything. John Cain, McCrae Editor: References to “smart parking infrastructure” being moved from the current budget to that of 2022/23 and paid parking are made in the online minutes (pages 10 and 13) of Mornington Peninsula Shire’s 22 February public meeting.

Playground verse Dromana’s new 160K playground has not a skerrick of shade around. For all that money and expertise, it’s odd to have no sails or trees: “Half-baked” may apply to the parents and kids Maybe the plan too, despite all those quids We presume landscaping is on its way

So, parents and children can happily play. Paula Polson, Dromana

Footpath alert This week I parked my car near the centre of the shopping area in Main Street, Hastings. As I stepped onto the footpath I was nearly run down by two young cyclists racing down it doing wheel stands. Nearing 90, I am fortunate to have reasonable mobility, but a collision could easily have put me in a wheelchair, or worse. I was left shaking for the rest of the afternoon. Of course I reported the incident to the police, but how can we teach the young ones to respect the safety of others? Kevin Sack, Somers

Forgotten bikes We have a great new road at Bentons Road. All two kilometres of it, broad two-lane highway, with Armco to the edge (for safety I hear you roar). Twelve months overdue, safe to assume over budget. And no bike path. Come on guys, you can do better than this. It is a well-used bicycle route. Surely it’s not that hard? Martin Thraves, Mount Martha

Pray for Ukraine Our family has relatives in Poland, Ukraine and Russia. For more than 100 years our descendants have lived, travelled and worked in these countries through good times and bad. [Russian president Vladimir] Putin’s invasion of Ukraine has shocked the world, including the Russian people. Putin has no respect for human life as innocent Ukrainians flee their cities and protesting Russians are arrested. We fear for the women and children arriving alone in foreign countries and the men defending Ukraine. Putin and his military leaders are war criminals seeking to create a new Soviet Union. Pray for Ukraine and Europe. Name and address supplied

Release refugees During the past two weeks the Grandmothers for Refugees Flinders Electorate, have held stalls in Mornington and Bittern to share up-to-date information about refugees. I have just sent 111 letters from the stalls, signed by members of the public to Immigration Minister Alex Hawke and the Prime Minister [Scott Morrison]. The people signing these letters were aware of the Australian government’s harmful handling of refugee issues and were greatly concerned about the harshness of the policies and the length of time refugees spent in detention. They wanted the government to know of their concerns. The recent publicity about [tennis professional] Novak Djokovic’s detention in the Park Hotel, Carlton has increased the awareness of many. The fact that there are still refugees locked up in Melbourne, many of whom have been in detention for up to nine years, continues to shock.

The deteriorating situation in Afghanistan continues. It is more than six months since the Australian Defence Force withdrew. Many Afghans still seek safety in Australia, and many applications have been submitted to the Immigration Department for family members to be united here. The signed letters urge the prime minister to increase the Australian intake of humanitarian places for refugees to at least 20,000, and to accelerate the processing of the many urgent applications. The letters also requested the immigration minister to immediately release the refugees in the Park Hotel into the community. Now is the time for the Australian government to show humanitarian leadership. There is so much unrest in the world. Ann Renkin, Shoreham

Affordable is here What does Mornington Peninsula Shire Council think social and affordable housing is? The same stuff we build now that will cost a bundle. If the same stuff we build now will work then why is there a housing shortage? Or will the council step up to novel affordable housing concepts? Things like 3D printed houses. Modular houses. No brick. Prefab construction. There are many “affordable” options. If Australians want affordable housing they need to change their concept of what housing is and what works. We do not need housing like federal government schemes which cost more to build than conventional housing costs. If you want to have a look at a great possibility drive past Peninsula Eco Villas and Beach Huts, 15/33 Truemans Road, Capel Sound. Joe Lenzo, Safety Beach

‘Dumping’ update I previously posed some serious questions about the management of litter and “dumping” throughout Mornington Peninsula Shire, but also raised issues of responsibility and delegation for such tasks in a timely, efficient and ongoing manner (“Shire, VicRoads avoid rubbish responsibility” Letters 15/2/22). My understanding is that the basis of any response is to be found in the Land Management Act, which delineates the specific responsibilities of VicRoads and the council. I urged the shire and VicRoads to meet and clarify respective responsibilities. Being a trusting type, I am sure that as the senior member of council, the mayor Cr Anthony Marsh is right on top of this issue and his letter of acknowledgement is simply lost in the mail. In other exciting update news, the $600,000 gold plated dunny of Safety Beach is coming along nicely. (Well, I did spot a possum in the wreckage of the only wall knocked down thus far, but still it has been designated as a “must see” in the upcoming edition of Lonely Planet.) The opening day entertainment list continues to grow. Local resident and aspiring songstress Kylie may do a spirited rendition of I should be so lucky, and the Mothers Beach, Mornington flasher promises something special on the day. David Martin, Mount Martha


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Frankston Times

8 March 2022

PAGE 17


100 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK...

Fire brigade entertained with ‘smoke social’ Compiled by Cameron McCullough TO mark their appreciation of the services rendered by the fire brigades of Frankston, Carrum and Chelsea in subduing recent fires about the foreshore, the residents of Seaford entertained representatives of the brigades above named at a smoke social in the Seaford Hall, on Saturday evening, February 25th. There was a very large attendance, about 100 visitors sitting down to tables bountifully supplied with every good thing known to the culinary art. The Borough of Carrum was represented by Cr. Stephens, and the Shire of Frankston and Hastings sent a strong contingent in Crs. Armstrong, Howell and Latham. Mr. C. Hunter, president of the Seaford Progress Association, occupied the chair, and delivered the speech of welcome to the visitors. Later on the formal toast list was proceeded with. The chairman, after giving the loyal toast, proposed the health of the members of the fire brigades, in which he expressed the indebtedness of the Seaford people to the men who had so readily assisted in fighting the fires along the foreshore. Crs. Armstrong and Howell also added words of sincere thanks, and the toast was honoured with great enthusiasm. Captain Smith (Chelsea) responded in humorous vein, and stated that his men had done no more than their duty. Capt. D. Petrie (Frankston) also replied. While his brigade did not look for thanks, it was pleasing to know that their services were appreciated. The Frankston Brigade, he said,

was indebted to Mr. Morris Jacobs for kindly supplying vehicles to convey them to Seaford on the occasion of the conflagration. Harmony was provided during the evening by Messrs. Grieves, Brickfield, Tate, Ellis, Coulthard, Peters and Larkin. Mr. Grieves also rendered fine service in playing the pianoforte accompaniments. A very successful evening was brought to a conclusion by the singing of the National Anthem. The Seaford committee worked enthusiastically in entertaining the visitors. The genial chairman (Mr. Hunter) was the right man in the right place, while Mr. Muir, as the presiding genius, who regulated the flow of ambrosial waters, rendered Hebe superfluous. Messrs. F. Moffit, Martorana, Everard, Daly and others also assisted. *** AT the Frankston Police Court on Monday last, before Mr. Knight, P.M., and Messrs. C. W. Grant, W. Armstrong and Luxford, J.’sP., a number of cases arising out of the activities of the licensing police were heard. John Richards, licensee of the Riviera Hotel, Seaford, was called upon to answer two charges of serving liquor to other than bona fide travellers during prohibited hours. Constable Davey, of Melbourne, gave evidence to the effect that on 29th January last, in company with Constable Hay he visited the Riviera Hotel at 7.45 p.m. They were stopped at the door by a person who appeared to be in charge of the premises, and they were asked if

they were bona-fide travellers. They admitted they were not, and said they had come from Chelsea. The man at the door asked them to produce their railway tickets, and they showed him the return half of tickets, Chelsea to Melbourne. They were then served with drinks. The same witness said that on the 5th February at 11.45 a.m. he again visited the hotel with Constable Hay. The same man once again barred their progress at the door. They told him they had just walked up from Chelsea, and on further explaining that they had been in the hotel on the previous Sunday, he allowed them to enter, and they were served with drinks. Witness was out looking for “sly groggers.” To Inspector McCormack: Davey was dressed in a blue suit on the day in question. Inspector McCormack: Well, Davey says he was dressed all in white. To the P.M.: He was not trying to protect his billet. He was not trying to make up to Richards for letting him down. P.M., to Inspector McCormack: Will you withdraw the charge? Do you want a conviction? The evidence is that this is a well conducted hotel and the licensee bears an exceptionally good character. He is the sort of man you want to hold a license and you say yourself that the hotel is well conducted. Inspector McCormack said he would withdraw one case. Upon the P.M. again suggesting to the Inspector to withdraw the other case as well, Inspector McCormack

declined to do so, owing, as he said, to complaints received. A fine of £2 was imposed on the first charge, and the second charge was withdrawn. *** MESSRS Taylor and Ritchie, Ford Agents of Mornington, who are representatives for Frankston, Mornington and Peninsula Districts, wish to announce that they will have and view, and will demonstrate at the forth coming Somerville Show, several of the latest Model Ford Cars and Trucks. *** MR H. M. Collins, vice-president of the Alfred Hospital, has convened a public meeting at Frankston, to form a branch of the Alfred Hospital Auxiliary. The movement is sure to receive the warm support of district residents, and a large attendance is hoped for at the Frankston Hall on Thursday, 23rd inst:, at 3pm. *** MRS M. Moloney, who for several years was licensee of The Pier Hotel, Frankston, was presented with a wristlet watch on Saturday afternoon, last, at an informal little gathering of friends. Mr. A. E. Lasslett, J.P. made the presentation, and his remarks were supported by Mr Jas. Grice, J.P. Mr R. Fairnie responded on behalf of Mrs Moloney. *** AT last week’s council meeting a legal opinion was received from the Shire Solicitor, stating that the action proposed by the Council for striking a special rate for financing the High

School proposal could not be carried out at this stage, but indicated that the money could be provided out of the general municipal fund, by placing some on the estimates. Cr. Gray said the council should face the position. It meant increasing the general rate by about 3d., extending over 3 or 4 years, if the adjoining councils did not assist. The president thought they should make a further effort to secure support from outside councils. Cr. Gray moved that a conference be held at a date to be fixed, and that the adjoining councils, the Peninisula School Associations, and this Council attend; that Mr Tait, Director of Education be advised, and invited to be present, with a view to discussing the financial position. Cr. May was in favor of bringing in the schools associations, and seconded the resolution, which was carried. It was also resolved to ask the secretary of the Peninsula Schools Association to call a meeting at once, and that Crs. Mason and Armstrong be deputed to attend same and explain the position. *** A WARNING – ANYONE found Taking HAY or WOOD out of any of my Paddocks, or Found TRESPASSING, with or without Dogs or Guns, will be Prosecuted. N. C HOLDSWORTH, ‘Weerona “ Baxter, *** From the pages of the Frankston and Somerville Standard, 10 March 1922

Attention Schools, sporting clubs & community groups

Free advertising listings Each month the Frankston Times will run a Community Events page, where your school or organisation can promote upcoming events, fund raisers, social events, etc. at no charge. This page is sponsored by Frankston Arts Centre, and listings are completely free. Lisiting should be about 40 words and include event name, date, time & address.

Send your listing to:

Community Events

PO Box 588, Hastings 3915 or email

communityevents@mpnews.com.au PAGE 18

Frankston Times

8 March 2022

BLACK COCKATOO TELLS UNTOLD STORY OF AUSTRALIA’S ALL-INDIGENOUS CRICKET TEAM ALMOST 20 years before Australia and England faced-off in the first-ever Ashes battle, it was an all-Indigenous team from Western Victoria who paved the way. Over 150 years ago, 13 brave Aboriginal men in Western Victoria picked up their cricket bats and embarked on a treacherous voyage to England and into the unknown – all in the name of sport. Risking illness and persecution, Australia’s first international cricket team – including Australia’s first Indigenous sporting hero, Johnny Mullagh – amazed the English crowds with astonishing talent, personality and grit. They should have returned to Australia as celebrated heroes. Instead they came back to find the world they once knew was no longer there. Ensemble Theatre’s production of Black Cockatoo premiered at the Sydney Festival in 2020 and is now on a nationwide tour bringing it to Frankston Arts Centre on Tuesday 15

March. This funny and incredibly moving Australian play was written by Geoffrey Atherden (Mother and Son) and directed by former Sydney Festival Artistic Director, Wesley Enoch. Enoch explains, “Everyone should know this story. It’s about our great national obsession and our great national neglect.” “Australian Cricket is full of characters and stories, some we know about but many we don’t. But, few would know about the first ever Australian team to tour to England; the fact that is was in 1868 and that the team was made up of 13 Aboriginal cricketers from Western Victoria, that one player died and was buried in London or that Johnny Mullagh was our first Australian sporting hero.” Black Cockatoo will be performed at Frankston Arts Centre on Tuesday 15 March, 8pm. Tickets at thefac.com.au or on 03 9784 1060.


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ACROSS 1. Public plant park, ... garden 4. Australian marsupial 7. Exalt 8. Peruvian mammal 9. Verb modifier 12. Cumbersome 15. Conversation 17. Merchant

18. Not censored 21. Sloping typeface 22. Express gratitude to 23. Stopping momentarily

DOWN 1. Dressed (wound) 2. Muddled 3. Informal talk 4. Ship’s spine 5. Friendly 6. Opera solo 10. Swell outwards 11. Chick’s cry

13. Year-old animal 14. Eyelash cosmetic 16. Jousting weapons 18. Module 19. Cattle parasite 20. Coarse file

Puzzles supplied by Lovatts Publications Pty Ltd www.lovattspuzzles.com See page 23 for solutions.

THE MEANING OF EXISTENCE... AND OTHER SHORT STORIES

Everything’s Kaputin – Autocratic For the People By Stuart McCullough THE world is crazy. And by ‘crazy’, I don’t mean ‘white goods at unbeatable prices’ kinda crazy or even ‘you don’t have to be crazy to work here, but it helps’ coffee mug crazy but, rather, crazy in the most totally and irretrievably deranged, brutal sense imaginable. Doubtless, there are some incredibly intelligent people who can give extraordinary and insightful analysis as to why Ukraine has been invaded. But for all their dissections of history and geo-political tensions, the whole thing seems to boil down to one, simple proposition – Vladimir Putin is a jerk. And by ‘jerk’, I don’t mean ‘wouldn’t let me merge while trying to get onto Peninsula Link’ type of jerk or even ‘he pushed in front of me and bought the last remaining boysenberry choc-top at the mid-afternoon screening of House of Gucci’ kind of jerk. I’m talking about turbo-charged, supersonic jerkdom that’s so gigantic that it casts a shadow for miles and can be seen from space. We’re talking ‘Hall of Fame’ jerkiness that will be remembered. Forever. I mistakenly assumed everyone felt the way I did. After all, it’s not hard to hate a guy whose hobbies include poisoning his enemies and annexing the Crimea. This is someone who went his entire childhood without smiling. Chances are, he only smiles now when he’s stealing a kitten or putting his rubbish in someone else’s wheelie bin. But not everyone thinks he’s a cad. I’ve never met Tucker Carlson. I did, however, write to him once when he said that Australia ‘has no freedom’. My letter informed him his comments had gone down like the proverbial cold

cup of sick and that instead of having ‘no freedom’, we have so much of the stuff that it sits around in buckets. That was seven years ago and I’m beginning

to suspect he may not write back. Tucker had a lot to say in the days preceding the invasion. In particular, he encouraged his viewers to question

why they hate Vladimir Putin. The answer, ‘because it’s deeply satisfying’ was, apparently, not good enough. Instead, he implored those watching to ask themselves a series of questions as a means of determining whether it was fair to dislike a murderous autocrat. The first question was ‘Has Putin ever called me racist?’ I’m not sure that Putin has called me anything, but I put that down to luck. To date, we’ve never met. But if we did, I’m certain he’d steal my bathroom soaps, extinguish his cigar in my pot plant before kicking the gate on the way out. That’s if he even agreed to leave. Knowing my luck, he’d annex the living room and spend the evening watching re-runs of ‘Perfect Strangers’ (he’s a big fan of Balki, apparently). Tucker’s second question was even more penetrating: ‘Has Putin ever threatened to fire me for disagreeing with him?’ Not me, personally. But he has a pretty handy record of assassinating opposition leaders and adding a spoonful of Novichok to someone’s tea when a sachet of Sweet’n low would have been more appropriate. Now that I think of it, getting fired by Vladimir Putin would be the least of your problems. I’m really not sure what point Tucker was trying to make. It didn’t end there. Tucker also asked whether Putin had ‘manufactured a worldwide pandemic that wrecked your business?’ It’s not a theory I’ve heard, but I’d say it can neither be ruled in or out. The questions then came thick and fast. ‘Is he teaching my children to embrace racial discrimination?’ (I don’t believe he’s registered as a teacher, so possibly not). ‘Is he making Fentanyl?’

(Definitely – he’s got a thing for pharmaceuticals.) It ended with the somewhat mystifying ‘Does he eat dogs?’ (I can’t say for sure but, on balance, probably.) Before I had so much a chance to finish writing down my answers, Tucker spoiled it by adding, ‘The answer to all these questions is no’. I had one ‘no’, a couple of ‘yeses’ and a ‘maybe’. I’m not sure what the point of the exercise was, save that it’s surely the worst decision tree, ever. Things only got freakier from there. He referred to the tensions (and, frankly, imminent invasion) as a ‘border dispute’. That’s a bit like describing Ebola as a case of the sniffles. Tucker then compared the ‘border dispute’ with a decision to allow ‘the world’ (presumably tourists) to enter America. He then made what can only be described as the stupidest statement ever uttered on television, which given the humdingers that preceded it, is saying something – noting that situation is described as ‘equitable’ and the other a ‘war crime’. The difference, of course, is tanks. Generally, if you turn up in a tank there’s a chance that your arrival will be viewed as hostile. Or maybe that’s just me. P.J. O’Rourke would have had plenty to say about the current state of affairs. He passed away a couple of weeks ago. I loved how he wrote about politics. Insightful, hilarious and biting. He’d have had plenty to say about Tucker Carlson. P.J. and I didn’t always agree, but he’d have agreed with me on this much - Vladimir Putin is a jerk. stuart@stuartmccullough.com

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8 March 2022

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PROPOSAL TO UPGRADE OPTUS MOBILE PHONE BASE STATION WITH 5G AT Existing Monopole, 550 Hall Road, Skye VIC 3977 Optus Ref: M2037, www.rfnsa.com.au/3977005 1. The proposed facility consists of the addition of new 5G equipment and associated works as follows: r Replacement of three (3) existing 4G panel antennas (2.69m long) with three new 4G panel antennas (2.1m long) at a height of 23.5 metres r New ancillary equipment including remote radio units, cabling and antenna mounts r Reconfiguration of existing equipment on the facility and within the rooftop shelter r The existing monopole reaches a height of 30.5 metres high, and the antennas will be flush-mounted to the pole 2. Optus regards the proposed installation as a low-impact facility in accordance with the Telecommunications (Low-impact Facilities) Determination 2018 (Amendment No.1, 2021) based on the description above. 3. Notification is being undertaken in accordance with Section 7 of Industry Code C564:2020 Mobile Phone Base Station Deployment. 4. Members of the public may obtain further information on the proposed work, and we invite you to provide written comments about the proposal. Further information and/or comments should be directed to Optus’ representative c/- James McIver, Catalyst ONE Pty Ltd; phone: 03 9013 6175; email: consultation@catalystone.com.au and post: PO Box 1119, Crows Nest NSW 1585 by 24 March 2022. 12539579-NG10-22

PROPOSAL TO UPGRADE VODAFONE MOBILE PHONE BASE STATION AT LANGWARRIN SOUTH INCLUDING 5G 3155 Pearcedale: 180 West Road, Langwarrin South VIC 3911 (RFNSA 3912002) The proposed facility consists of the addition of new equipment and associated works, including 5G, as follows: r Removal of existing Vodafone antennas and equipment r Installation of three (3) panel antennas, 2.7m long, on the existing headframe r Installation of three (3) panel antennas, 0.8m long, on the existing headframe r Installation of ancillary equipment including fifteen (15) remote radio units, antenna mounts and cabling 1. Vodafone regards the proposed installations as Low-Impact Facilities under the Telecommunications (Low-impact Facilities) Determination 2018 (“The Determination”), based on the description above. 2. In accordance with Section 7 of C564:2020 Mobile Phone Base Station Deployment Code, we invite you to provide feedback about the proposal. Should you require further information or wish to comment, please contact Vanessa Wan at Axicom, 02 9495 9000, community@axicom.com.au or Level 1, 110 Pacific Highway, St Leonards NSW 2065 by Wednesday 23 March 2022. Further information may also be obtained from www.rfnsa.com.au/3912002. 12538939-HC10-22

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Langwarrin women make history, Baden Powell take out top spot By Brodie Cowburn

MPCA WOMENS

LANGWARRIN have been crowned the first ever MPCA Women’s division premiers. Langwarrin took on Balnarring at Lloyd Park on Sunday. The two sides have played each other twice this season, with a tie the result in round one and a 12 run win to Langwarrin the result in round six. Balnarring chose to bat first on Grand Final day. They set Langy a target of 90 to score to win. Some good bowling from Kiah Laughlin-Glen frustrated Balnarring. She posted figures of 3/21, her best bowling of the season. Langwarrin’s run chase was led by first drop batter Kylie Walters. She has been a star all season for Langwarrin, and Sunday was no different. She scored 44 not out to get her side over the line. Langwarrin hit the winning runs with six wickets to spare. They have claimed their spot in history as the inaugural MPCA Women’s premiers.

PROVINCIAL

THE MPCA men’s season has come to an end, and finals have arrived. In the Provincial division, Baden Powell finished on top of the ladder de-

spite a rain interrupted day on Saturday. They drew against Long Island. Old Peninsula held onto second place despite falling to defeat against Red Hill. Old Peninsula batted first on their home deck, and put together a good score. They put 201 runs on the scoreboard, 78 of them coming from Wade Pelzer. Pelzer has been in good form as of late. He has scored three half centuries in five matches. Red Hill’s run chase was boosted by a dominant showing from opener Luke Robertson. He smashed 11 fours on his way to a score of 91. Red Hill managed to just get over the line. Simon Dart also contributed with a good score of 51. Langwarrin finished third. They cemented their spot with a dominant 82 run win over Sorrento, who occupy the last finals position. Baxter finished one win outside the top four. Mt Eliza finished last, with Red Hill narrowly above them on percentage.

PENINSULA

PINES have finished the 2021/2022 Peninsula division season on top of the ladder. Already mathematically confirmed to finish on top, Pines could afford to play

without too much pressure on Saturday. They flexed their muscle by defeating Rosebud. Pines scored 161 during their innings. Opener Connor Jackson top scored with 54. Rosebud offered up very little during their run chase. They were bowled out for just 97. Ashley Nagel was Rosebud’s best batter with a score of 17. Rosebud ended up claiming the wooden spoon, finishing the season with three wins. Pines will be joined in the finals by second-placed Heatherhill, third-placed Somerville, and the Seaford Tigers. Heatherhill defeated Mornington by nine wickets last weekend, while Somerville also picked up a win. Somerville chased down Moorooduc thanks to a huge 141 run partnership between Brenton Alp (88) and Leigh Lowry (81 n.o.). No result was reached during the weekend's final game, pitting Seaford Tigers against Flinders.

DISTRICT

DROMANA and Carrum Downs faced off on Saturday in a match to determine who would finish on top of the District division ladder. Dromana Reserve hosted the two sides. Carrum Downs elected to bat first, and it wasn’t all smooth sailing.

The in-form Gordon Waterfall was Carrum Downs’ best. He scored 54 runs before he was caught out. He has only been dismissed for a single digit score once since November. Gordon Waterfall’s wicket fell with his side at 3/127. From there they quickly collapsed, finishing all out for just 144. Adam Ciavarella helped send the tailend batters back to the sheds. He posted final figures of 3/26. Opener Kierran Voelkl was instrumental to Dromana’s run chase. He scored 58 not out from 99 deliveries. Dromana hit the winning runs with six overs left to play and six wickets left to spare. The win confirmed their spot on the top of the ladder heading into finals, with Carrum Downs finishing second. Carrum finished third and Delacombe Park finished fourth. The two sides drew against Hastings and lost to Frankston YCW respectively last weekend. Despite the good win, Frankston YCW still finished the season bottom of the ladder. The final match for the weekend saw Crib Point beat Main Ridge by 111 runs.

SUB DISTRICT

THE final Sub District division ladder order has been set after a tight season which saw less than two wins separate

top spot from sixth spot. Seaford finished on top of the ladder. Their match against Skye on Saturday ended with no result, but the two sides will get another chance to lock horns with each other this week. Skye finished fourth, setting up a semi-final clash with Seaford. Tyabb locked up second spot by defeating Pearcedale by 42 runs in a scrappy affair. Tyabb were bowled out for just 116 runs. Bradley Trotter took 4/11, his best ever figures, to help restrict their total. Trotter’s good performance continued with bat in hand. He opened for Pearcedale and scored 33 runs. Unfortunately for him he got no help from his teammates. All other Pearcedale batsmen failed to make a score in the double digits. They were bowled out for 74. Luke Rus took 4/27. Lachlan Hose also impressed with the ball, bowling six maidens and posting final figures of 2/6 off his eight overs. Tootgarook finished third. They defeated Rye on Saturday to confirm their finals place. Mt Martha finished just outside the top four. They defeated Ballam Park on Saturday, but other results didn’t go their way. Boneo defeated last-placed Balnarring to close out their season.

Tigertiger ready to pounce in Adelaide Cup HORSE RACING

By Ben Triandafillou ROB Blacker hopes his Adelaide Cup plans for his promising stayer Tigertiger can come to fruition on Monday 14 March. The lightly raced six-year-old spectacularly rose through the grades over the spring from winning in maiden grade to winning a Stakes race in his first preparation with the Morningtonbased trainer. Since claiming the Listed Bagot Handicap (2800m) at Flemington on New Year’s day, Blacker has had the former New Zealand stayer solely aimed towards the Group 2 Adelaide Cup (3200m). Tigertiger had a freshen up following that Stakes success and has since put in two promising runs at Flemington. He finished seventh over 2000m last month before then running a game second last Saturday

over 2600m. Blacker said everything he’s done this prep has been purely geared towards getting Tigertiger ready for the 3200m contest. “I was really happy with how he went on Saturday, I don’t think we could’ve gone any better,” Blacker said. “I had him ready for the two miles on Saturday because it’s a really short turn around to the Adelaide Cup. I didn’t want to be having to do anything with him for fitness in between now and Adelaide, I just wanted it to be mainly recovery.” Blacker said he didn’t want to overdo it with the lightly framed stayer. “He’d be very, very easy for someone to overdo it with as he doesn’t carry a lot of condition which is tricky for a stayer because you need the miles in their legs. You need to know the horse and my son Natz, who

rides him in all of his work, has done a great job with him,” he said. Blacker is confident the rise to the 3200m won’t pose a problem for the son of Zed. “I’ve got no worries about the race and no worries about the distance. We will run into Daqiansweet Junior and Skelm and I think they’re just very good quality stayers and there’s no evidence that we’re any better than them yet,” he said. “We’re going there fit and ready but I’m not going there assuming we’re definitely the best horse in the race. We’ve still got to prove that, and our hope is that the 3200m is of more of an advantage to us than to the other horses in the field.” Jockey Harry Coffey is likely to take up the ride on Tigertiger who is expected to get in low at the weights. “I think we’ll be on the minimum, maybe half of a kilo over,” Blacker estimated.

Cup bound: Jockey Daniel Moor guides the Rob Blacker-trained Tigertiger to victory in the Listed Bagot Handicap. Picture: Supplied

10-13 March 2022 Thursday 11am to 5pm, Friday and Saturday 10am to 5pm, Sunday 10am to 4pm

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Frankston Times

8 March 2022


FRANKSTON TIMES scoreboard

Hodgson ruled out for season SOCCER

By Craig MacKenzie FRANKSTON Pines captain CJ Hodgson won’t play this season due to post-concussion syndrome. Hodgson was substituted in a friendly against Mazenod early last month after a head clash. The 28-year-old has suffered multiple concussions throughout his career which now hangs in the balance as there is uncertainty over whether he can return. “I knew something wasn’t right straight away as my eye was going weird and there was blurriness so I had to come off,” Hodgson said. When a teammate phoned later that night it was clear that all was not well. “I was lying in bed when Marinos (Panayi) rang and I couldn’t put any words together because I was slurring my words so much.” Hodgson was off work for a week and “pretty much slept for most of the time”. An MRI was arranged and when he discussed the results with his GP she was blunt. “She told me that I had to take a year off for a start,” he said. “I don’t think it’s really hit me yet but I guess that will happen when the season starts and I can’t walk out and play.” This was to be Hodgson’s testimonial year and he was set to make his 250th appearance for Pines. He was forced to watch from the sidelines last Friday night instead of leading the side onto the synthetic pitch at Carrum Downs Recreation Reserve for its Australia Cup tie against Lara United. “I handed over the armband to Ryan (Ratcliffe) before the game and I told Christian (Malgioglio) he can have my number 14 shirt but they might retire it. “I have to see a concussion specialist as I’ve got short-term memory loss as well and I’ve got another MRI coming up so hopefully that doesn’t show up anything. “It’s not good but it is what it is and I’ve got to look after my health now.” And with Hodgson looking on Pines smashed Lara United 6-0. The home side led 1-0 at half-time courtesy of a Dave Change own goal in the 13th minute. Two goals in the opening minutes of the second half effectively ended this tie, the first from a superbly struck first-time strike by Joe O’Connor following a clever Malgioglio corner and the provider turned scorer a couple

CJ sidelined: Frankston Pines’ captain Chris Hodgson has been forced to stop playing this year. Picture: Darryl Kennedy of minutes later sneaking in at the far post for a simple finish. Liam Baxter made it 4-0 in the 68th minute after Thomas Dunn was sent clear on the right. Dunn’s cross was spilled by Lara keeper Jayden Bellears-Price and Baxter tapped it in. It was 5-0 after substitute Dylan Waugh finished off a Marinos Panayi cutback from the right in the 85th minute and an Aaran Currie header at the back post in the 91st minute completed the rout. Pines are one of just three local clubs remaining in the Cup along with Mornington and Langwarrin as Skye United and Peninsula Strikers went down to State 1 opponents. Mornington joined Pines after a 6-0 stroll against Uni Hill Eagles on Saturday while NPL2 outfit Langwarrin enters the draw for the next round with

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and Berwick City player Oscar Marsden. Meanwhile Langwarrin lost 2-0 to Melbourne City in a pre-season hitout at Lawton Park last week and no senior friendly is scheduled this weekend. Last weekend Chelsea drew 1-1 in its friendly at home against Knox City Churches. Chelsea’s goal came from a stunning free-kick from Will Ong and this Thursday Carlo Melino’s outfit meets Aspendale Stingrays at Edithvale Recreation Reserve (6.30pm and 8.30pm). Baxter went down 2-0 last weekend at home to State 3 title aspirant Noble Park United. George Hughes’ side did well against a Noble Park outfit that was undefeated last season and has made some significant additions to its squad. Nathan Yole was back for Baxter and Sunday Kim, a central defender on

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games played midweek. Taylan Geylan gave Mornington the lead after just two minutes and further first half goals from Rhys Craigie and a second from Geylan had the home side in cruise control at the break. Craigie, Josh Hine and Tom Wood scored in the second half. This Saturday Mornington will play Caroline Springs George Cross at Dallas Brooks Park (seniors 11am, reserves 1pm). Skye lost 4-0 to Banyule City at Lawton Park while a Huss Chemini volley couldn’t stop Strikers losing 3-1 at Centenary Park to Eltham Redbacks. This Thursday Skye is back at Lawton Park to take on Langy’s under-21s at 7.15pm while Strikers are at home again on Saturday against Caroline Springs George Cross (1pm and 3pm). Skye is hoping to sign ex-Strikers

trial from Doveton, was impressive. But Nat Daher, Dan Disseldorp, Matt McDermott and Jack Buttery were sidelined due to injury while Robbie O’Toole was unavailable due to cricket commitments. Baxter travels to Olympic Park this Thursday to take on home side Rosebud at 7.30pm. Somerville Eagles lost 4-3 to Bendigo City at Epsom Huntly Recreation Reserve on Saturday. Lee Barber’s side was without Jack Carter, Chris Thomas, Adam Steele, Guil Riberio and Connor Guyett and was 2-1 down at half-time. Somerville’s goals came from fine finishes by Adrian Pace, Ronnie Krishnan and Connor Mcfall whose volley from inside the area followed an excellent Krishnan cross from the left. “It was a very pleasing effort given that we had no fresh substitutes and weather conditions were tough,” Barber said. “And it was a huge effort from Joe Simmons who played a full game in the reserves and seniors.” Barber takes his side to Rowville Secondary College this Saturday to play Knox Churches at 3pm (reserves 1pm). Mount Martha was impressive in its 3-0 friendly away to State 4 side Lyndale United. The visitors took the lead in the 3rd minute when Ethan Sanderson ran onto a fine through ball from Connor Mooney and finished in the bottom corner. Mount Martha created chance after chance but a combination of good goalkeeping and poor finishing kept it at bay until the 75th minute. A pinpoint pass from Hamish Bugden split the Lyndale defence and Sanderson cleverly lifted the ball over the advancing keeper to make it 2-0. Later in the contest Sanderson thought he’d notched his hat-trick but the keeper did well to block his attempt only for Adam Martin to tuck away the loose ball. This Sunday Mount Martha hosts Mount Eliza in the annual Mental Health Safety Net Cup at Civic Reserve (1pm and 3pm). Aspendale Stingrays played friendlies on Thursday and Saturday last week winning both games. On Thursday the Stingrays won 5-0 against State 4 East opponent Noble Park with goals from James Macnab (2), Taylan Yildirim, Kieran Hughes and Ben Garside. On Saturday the Stingrays won 1-0 against Berwick Churches with Garside getting the winner.

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Frankston Times

8 March 2022


10.00 | 12.30 | 2.30

10.00 | 10.45 | 11.30 | 12.15 | 1.00 | 1.45

KIDS ADVENTURE ZONE | FREE RIDES & ACTIVITIES

FUTURA KELPIES WORKING DOGS

SHEEP SHEARING DEMOS (Top Oval)

(Bottom Oval: 9.00 - 5.00) Super Slide Melt Down Chair-O-Plane

Fairground Rides: Cup n Saucer Monkey Mania

3.30 DOG HIGH SCRAMBLE

9.45 - 4.30

9.00 - 5.00

AUSTRALIAN MOUNTAINBOARDERS

PONY RIDES

10.00 | 1.00

11.30

CHAINSAW CARVER

BATA GUMBOOT THROW

Demos & Workshops

9.45 10.45 12.15 1.45 3.45

($50 vouchers to win Bottom Oval)

9.00 - 5.00 Black Snake Productions

9.00 - 5.00 Children's Petting Farm

Kelly Mini Sports kids games

Kids Face Painting with Amanda and Faery Emma

Learn about our native wildlife & reptiles. Wildlife conservation through interactive eduction.

MP MUSIc ZONE

POTTERY WORKSHOPS

MP Paddock Stage

Adults & kids are invited to explore their creativity with Stoker Studio & Kate Bowman Ceramics.

Fantastic local music programed by MP Music Network!

10.00 - 11.00 12.00 - 1.00 2.00 - 3.00 4.00 - 5.00

12.00 Royal Australian Navy Rock Band

Paint a plate or cup Hand build a dish Paint a plate or cup Hand build a dish

10.00 Blue Tuesdays 1.40 3.30

(sEE MARKED LOCATIONS ON THE MAP)

SITES & entertainment 1. TOP OVAL horse judging WORKING DOGS dOG HIGH SCRAMBLE mp music marquee VINTAGE TRACTOR DISPLAY gendore tractor display 2. BOTTOM OVAL MINIATURE GOATS AUS MOUNTAINBOARDERS BATA GUMBOOT TOSS PONY RIDES FAIRGROUND RIDES CAR CORNER (tOYOTA, mAZDA, MITSUBISHI, iSUZU)

4.00 - 5.30 The Soul Rangers - Chris

(local young high energy four-piece

The Calmer Miles The Warrains

Commerford duo

CREATE YOUR OWN SHOW EXPERIENCE!

This is just a snapshot of the day. The program content and times are subject to change. horticultural

hangout - 3mp hortICULTURAL STAGE & workshops - HORTICULTURAL STALLS - ENVIRONMENTAL ZONE - hortICULTURAL piazza

2 e

(food & drink stalls) - Bunnings Kids Planting fun

ls Lan Arkw el

aLPACA DISPLAY (IN sHEEP PAVILION) Alpaca YOUTH PARADERS Art & photography cattle cooking & cRAFT cider show fruit & vegetables FLOWERS miniature goats honey horses JUDGING hORT sTAGE mpp STAGE pOULTRY pet FANCY rats SHEEP: STUD / BLACK & COLOURED wine, beer, mead & liquers (in cooking) woodchop

(Relax, enjoy the vibes)

GATE 7&8

PAVILIONS & COMPETITONS

- cfa FIRE TRUCK

MINIATURE GOATS

MORNINgTON PENINSULA PADDOCK

FRIENDS OF THE SHOW

10 gate 10

7

GATE 5

SHEEP & alpaca PAVILION

HORSES ONLY

HORSE JUDGING

3

- mpP stage & WORKSHOPS - Mp pRODUCE, LOCAL FOOD & DRINK stalls - cIDER SHOW MARQUEE, Mead & CIDER PRODUCERS

POULTRY

12

KIDS CORNER

8

1

COOKING & CRAFT

CATTLE

4

PHOTOGRAPHY

3MP HORT STAGE

CIDER SHOW

& VIP’s

Locations AND ACTIVITIES are SUBJECT to change DEPENDING ON TIME OF PRINT

5

FACE PAINTING Peninsula WoodTurners Kelly Mini Sports Food & Coffee

artisan AvenueS

6 mpp STAGE

11

-

PET FANCY RATS

ART &

3. MCCLELLAND SPINNERS & WEAVERS 4. FERRET RACING emergency FLOWERS access 5. BABY ANIMAL FARM FRUIT & only 6. REPTILES & NATIVE ANIMALS VEGGIES HONEY 7. sheep shearer Art hur WOODCHOP 8. pottery workshops s Se at R 10. Peninsula WoodTurners d 11. WOOD CARVER (sculpture) 12. Cwa site FOOD & DRINK 13. Vintage Cars GATE 3 areas Note:

Rock Climbing Wall Cha Cha (Scrambler)

13

(craft stalls)

ALPACA YOUTH PARADERS

services & facilities INFORMATION (lost children)

RED HILL TENNIS Activities

atms FIRst aid toilets

gate 2: (emergency)

gate 1 (parking)

disabled toilet free water station

FREE PARKING / ATM’S ONSITE / BOOK TICKETS ONLINE VIA OUR WEBSITE: If a CODE RED day is called on the Mornington Peninsula the show will be cancelled. The Show adheres to all current COVID regulations at the time. Refer to statutory regulations.

www.redhillshow.com.au Frankston Times

8 March 2022

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2022 TIPPING CHART NAME

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ROUND 1 March 16–20 Melbourne vs. Western Bulldogs MCG Carlton vs. Richmond MCG St Kilda vs. Collingwood MRVL Geelong Cats vs. Essendon MCG GWS Giants vs. Sydney Swans AS Brisbane Lions vs. Port Adelaide The G Hawthorn vs. North Melbourne MCG Adelaide Crows vs. Fremantle AO West Coast Eagles vs. Gold Coast Suns OS

ROUND 2 March 24–27 Western Bulldogs vs. Carlton Sydney Swans vs. Geelong Cats Collingwood vs. Adelaide Crows Essendon vs. Brisbane Lions Port Adelaide vs. Hawthorn Gold Coast Suns vs. Melbourne North Melbourne vs. WC Eagles Richmond vs. GWS Giants Fremantle vs. St Kilda

MRVL SCG MCG MRVL AO MS MRVL MCG OS

ROUND 3 March 31–aPrIL 3 Western Bulldogs vs. Sydney Swans MRVL Melbourne vs. Essendon MCG Adelaide Crows vs. Port Adelaide AO GWS Giants vs. Gold Coast Suns GS Collingwood vs. Geelong Cats MCG Brisbane Lions vs. North Melbourne The G Carlton vs. Hawthorn MCG St Kilda vs. Richmond MRVL West Coast Eagles vs. Fremantle OS

ROUND 4 aPrIL 7–10 Port Adelaide vs. Melbourne

AO

Geelong Cats vs. Brisbane Lions GMHBA Sydney Swans vs. North Melbourne SCG Collingwood vs. West Coast Eagles MRVL Richmond vs. Western Bulldogs MCG Fremantle vs. GWS Giants OS Essendon vs. Adelaide Crows MRVL Hawthorn vs. St Kilda MCG Gold Coast Suns vs. Carlton MS

ROUND 5 aPrIL 14–18 Brisbane Lions vs. Collingwood North Melbourne vs. Wstrn Bulldogs West Coast Eagles vs. Sydney Swans St Kilda vs. Gold Coast Suns Adelaide Crows vs. Richmond Melbourne vs. GWS Giants Carlton vs. Port Adelaide Essendon vs. Fremantle Hawthorn vs. Geelong Cats

The G MRVL OS MRVL AO MCG MCG MRVL MCG

ROUND 6 aPrIL 22–25 GWS Giants vs. St Kilda Western Bulldogs vs. Adelaide Crows Port Adelaide vs. West Coast Eagles Fremantle vs. Carlton North Melbourne vs. Geelong Cats Gold Coast Suns vs. Brisbane Lions Richmond vs. Melbourne Hawthorn vs. Sydney Swans Essendon vs. Collingwood

MO MARS AO OS BA MS MCG UTAS MCG

ROUND 7 aPrIL 29–May 1 West Coast Eagles vs. Richmond Geelong Cats vs. Fremantle

OS GMHBA

Adelaide Crows vs. GWS Giants Melbourne vs. Hawthorn St Kilda vs. Port Adelaide Carlton vs. North Melbourne Collingwood vs. Gold Coast Suns Western Bulldogs vs. Essendon Sydney Swans vs. Brisbane Lions

AO MCG CS MRVL MCG MRVL SCG

ROUND 8 May 6–8 Port Adelaide vs. Western Bulldogs Fremantle vs. North Melbourne Richmond vs. Collingwood Sydney Swans vs. Gold Coast Suns GWS Giants vs. Geelong Cats Essendon vs. Hawthorn Brisbane Lions vs. West Coast Eagles Melbourne vs. St Kilda Carlton vs. Adelaide Crows

AO OS MCG SCG MO MRVL G MCG MRVL

ROUND 9 May 13–15 Collingwood vs. Western Bulldogs Hawthorn vs. Richmond North Melbourne vs. Port Adelaide St Kilda vs. Geelong Cats Sydney Swans vs. Essendon Adelaide Crows vs. Brisbane Lions Gold Coast Suns vs. Fremantle GWS Giants vs. Carlton West Coast Eagles vs. Melbourne

MRVL MCG BA MRVL SCG AO MS GS OS

ROUND 10 DetaILs tBc Adelaide Crows vs. St Kilda Carlton vs. Sydney Swans Fremantle vs. Collingwood Geelong Cats vs. Port Adelaide

AO MRVL OS GMHBAS

Frankston Times

8 March 2022

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Third GWS Giants vs. West Coast Eagles Hawthorn vs. Brisbane Lions North Melbourne vs. Melbourne Richmond vs. Essendon Western Bulldogs vs.GC Suns

GS UoTS MS MCG MarsS

GWS Giants vs. Western Bulldogs GS Port Adelaide vs. Sydney Swans AO Richmond vs. Carlton MCG St Kilda vs. Essendon MRVL West Coast Eagles vs. Geelong Cats OS

St Kilda vs. Fremantle MRVL Sydney Swans vs. Western Bulldogs SCG West Coast Eagles vs. Carlton OS

ROUND 11

ROUND 15

DetaILs tBc Brisbane Lions vs. GWS Giants The G Collingwood vs. Carlton MCG Geelong Cats vs. Adelaide Crows GMHBAS Gold Coast Suns vs. Hawthorn TIOS Melbourne vs. Fremantle MCG Port Adelaide vs. Essendon AO St Kilda vs. North Melbourne MRVL Sydney Swans vs. Richmond SCG West Coast Eagles vs. Western Bulldogs OS

DetaILs tBc Carlton vs. Fremantle MRVL Collingwood vs. GWS Giants MCG Geelong Cats vs. Richmond MCG Melbourne vs. Brisbane Lions MCG North Melbourne vs. Adelaide Crows BA Port Adelaide vs. Gold Coast Suns AO Sydney Swans vs. St Kilda SCG West Coast Eagles vs. Essendon OS Western Bulldogs vs. Hawthorn MRVL

DetaILs tBc Adelaide Crows vs. Collingwood Carlton vs. Geelong Cats Essendon vs. Gold Coast Suns Fremantle vs. Sydney Swans GWS Giants vs. Brisbane Lions Hawthorn vs. West Coast Eagles Melbourne vs. Port Adelaide North Melbourne vs. Richmond Western Bulldogs vs. St Kilda

ROUND 12 DetaILs tBc Adelaide Crows vs. West Coast Eagles AO Fremantle vs. Brisbane Lions OS Gold Coast Suns vs. North Melbourne TIOS Hawthorn vs. Collingwood MCG Melbourne vs. Sydney Swans MCG Western Bulldogs vs. Geelong Cats MRVL

ROUND 13 DetaILs tBc Brisbane Lions vs. St Kilda Collingwood vs. Melbourne Essendon vs. Carlton Fremantle vs. Hawthorn North Melbourne vs. GWS Giants Richmond vs. Port Adelaide

The G MCG MCG OS MRVL MCG

ROUND 14 DetaILs tBc Gold Coast Suns vs. Adelaide Crows

MS

Just like winning a Grand Final! PAGE D

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ROUND 16 DetaILs tBc Adelaide Crows vs. Melbourne AO Brisbane Lions vs. Western Bulldogs The G Carlton vs. St Kilda MRVL Essendon vs. Sydney Swans MCG Fremantle vs. Port Adelaide OS Geelong Cats vs. Nrth Melbourne GMHBAS Gold Coast Suns vs. Collingwood MS GWS Giants vs. Hawthorn GS Richmond vs. West Coast Eagles MCG

ROUND 17 DetaILs tBc Brisbane Lions vs. Essendon The G Collingwood vs. North Melbourne MCG Geelong Cats vs. Melbourne GMHBAS Gold Coast Suns vs. Richmond MS Hawthorn vs. Adelaide Crows MRVL Port Adelaide vs. GWS Giants AO

ROUND 18 AO MCG MRVL OS MO MCG TIOTP MRVL MRVL

ROUND 19 DetaILs tBc Brisbane Lions vs. Gold Coast Suns Carlton vs. GWS Giants Collingwood vs. Essendon North Melbourne vs. Hawthorn Port Adelaide vs. Geelong Cats Richmond vs. Fremantle Sydney Swans vs. Adelaide Crows West Coast Eagles vs. St Kilda Western Bulldogs vs. Melbourne

The G MRVL MCG BA AO MRVL SCG OS MRVL

ROUND 20 DetaILs tBc Adelaide Crows vs. Carlton AO Collingwood vs. Port Adelaide MCG Essendon vs. North Melbourne MRVL Fremantle vs. Melbourne OS Geelong Cats vs. Wstrn Bulldogs GMHBAS GC Suns vs. West Coast Eagles MetrS Richmond vs. Brisbane Lions MCG

St Kilda vs. Hawthorn Sydney Swans vs. GWS Giants

MRVL SCG

ROUND 21 DetaILs tBc Brisbane Lions vs. Carlton The G Geelong Cats vs. St Kilda GMHBAS GWS Giants vs. Essendon GS Hawthorn vs. Gold Coast Suns UoTS Melbourne vs. Collingwood MCG North Melbourne vs. Sydney Swans MRVL Port Adelaide vs. Richmond AO West Coast Eagles vs. Adelaide Crows OS Western Bulldogs vs. Fremantle MRVL

ROUND 22 DetaILs tBc Adelaide Crows vs. North Melbourne Essendon vs. Port Adelaide Fremantle vs. West Coast Eagles Gold Coast Suns vs. Geelong Cats Melbourne vs. Carlton Richmond vs. Hawthorn St Kilda vs. Brisbane Lions Sydney Swans vs. Collingwood Western Bulldogs vs. GWS Giants

AO MRVL OS MetrS MCG MCG MRVL SCG MRVL

ROUND 23 DetaILs tBc Brisbane Lions vs. Melbourne The G Carlton vs. Collingwood MCG Essendon vs. Richmond MCG Geelong Cats vs. WC Eagles GMHBAS GWS Giants vs. Fremantle Manuka Oval Hawthorn vs. Western Bulldogs UoTSNorth Melbourne vs. Gold Coast Suns MRVL Port Adelaide vs. Adelaide Crows AO St Kilda vs. Sydney Swans MRVL


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