Sun, Oct 13, 1996
Veteran political watchers had never seen anything like it. One, independent member of parliament dominating the news day after day. Ipswich fish and chip shop owner, Pauline Hanson was a political phenomenon. Not for what she was. But for what she was saying. Her views on race and immigration were considered extreme by some but apparently shared by many millions of Australians.
Sun, Aug 2, 1998
Richard Carleton hosts a discussion between a panel of politicians and an audience of candidates and supporters of Pauline Hanson's One Nation Party. The view is that the major political parties in Australia are out-of-touch with the concerns and aspirations of everyday citizens. Labor, Liberal, and National Party politicians no longer represent the will of the people.
Sun, May 21, 2006
An adventure into the unknown. 60 Minutes is going back to the Stone Age on the trail of a long lost tribe, the last of the cannibals. And the amazing thing is this isn't ancient history. The tribe really does exist and not all that far from us - our next-door neighbours. Nevertheless, it'll take a major expedition to find them. They're called the Korowai and they live just as they did 10,000 years ago, deep in the jungles of West Papua. Reporter Ben Fordham set out in search of the Korowai - these primitive warriors who have never seen a white man still believe in witchcraft and still eat human flesh.