Frontline

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Season 3
When Kate resigns, her replacement Carla quickly starts learning the tricks of the trade from Emma: particularly that in current affairs, it is not the story that's important, but the reporter.
Steve Barrett, an old friend of the office staff, gets promoted to executive producer of Sunday Forum, and seeks out Prowsie for advice on what to do.
As the day of Ashira's surgery nears, Marty and the team attempt to keep the story exclusive and Prowsie struggles to smooth-talk his way out of not mentioning Rotary's involvement. Brooke reveals that she is pregnant.
When a boy from Papua New Guinea is flown into Australia for open heart surgery, Frontline jumps onto the case. Although all the financing and work was organised by the charity Rotary, Prowsie keeps them out of the story.
Season 2
When Mike is accused of being lightweight he decides to hit back. But, his past catches up with him.
When a Frontline cameraman tapes a savage bashing the story is aired - with disastrous results.
Season 1
Frontline's quest for ratings overrides the quest for the full story... with devastating results.
Mike puts his job on the line when he is given an exclusive story that could incriminate some of the nation's most powerful businessmen.
To gain journalistic credibility Mike does a story in Bougainville on the civil war. In his absence, Brooke becomes the host.
Frontline make a name for themselves by talking to a gunman in the middle of a siege. This has disastrous effects when a couple of weeks later Mike speaks to another gunman.
Mike, angered by accusations of being a lightweight, decides to editorialise. Such a decision sparks a rash of complications.
This show satirised real people and news events, poking fun at the tactics employed by current affairs news shows like foot-in-the-door interview techniques and chequebook journalism.
This show satirised real people and news events, poking fun at the tactics employed by current affairs news shows like foot-in-the-door interview techniques and chequebook journalism.
This show satirised real people and news events, poking fun at the tactics employed by current affairs news shows like foot-in-the-door interview techniques and chequebook journalism.
This show satirised real people and news events, poking fun at the tactics employed by current affairs news shows like foot-in-the-door interview techniques and chequebook journalism.
This show satirised real people and news events, poking fun at the tactics employed by current affairs news shows like foot-in-the-door interview techniques and chequebook journalism.
This show satirised real people and news events, poking fun at the tactics employed by current affairs news shows like foot-in-the-door interview techniques and chequebook journalism.
This show satirised real people and news events, poking fun at the tactics employed by current affairs news shows like foot-in-the-door interview techniques and chequebook journalism.
This show satirised real people and news events, poking fun at the tactics employed by current affairs news shows like foot-in-the-door interview techniques and chequebook journalism.
This show satirised real people and news events, poking fun at the tactics employed by current affairs news shows like foot-in-the-door interview techniques and chequebook journalism.
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