The Feb 8 Show

Ore Trains, Ocean Crossings and the Long View of Summer

There is a particular texture to a February morning on the program. The holidays are over. The heat has settled in properly. Fires are burning in one state while another waits for rain. People are back at work, back on highways, back in boats and on beaches, carrying the season with them.

This week the lines stretched from the red dirt of Western Australia to the cold valleys of Utah, from Bass Strait crossings to million-dollar race wins, from seedless pumpkins to the first steps on the Moon.

Australia, as ever, was wide awake.

One Hundred and Forty Tonnes Before Dawn

Craig was somewhere between Wiluna and Leonora, running south along the Goldfields Highway with 140 tonnes of iron ore behind him. All up, he said, the rig weighs about 195 tonnes. It was still dark. Thirty degrees already. Cows wandering across the road.

He works fly-in fly-out. Four weeks on, two weeks off. A month at a time in the West, then home to the Gulf for a break. Twelve-hour shifts, sometimes twelve and a half. This was the last run of his swing before flying out on Monday.

Out there, the traffic is mostly other road trains and mine vehicles. Not much else. No suburban rush hour. No coffee queues. Just heat that sits in the cab and the long ribbon of bitumen through scrub.

When asked what he could see out the window, the answer was simple: bush, darkness, and the need to stay alert for livestock. With that much weight behind you, you do not get second chances.

Three Kayaks and 320 Kilometres of Water

Photo Credit: Visit Victoria

From the open highway to open ocean.

David rang from Roydon Island, just off the northern tip of Flinders Island in Bass Strait. He and two friends call themselves the Strait Crackers. They had launched from Port Welshpool, paddled to Wilsons Promontory, sheltered in Refuge Cove, then crossed to Hogan Island, on to Deal Island, and down toward Flinders.

Three exposed crossings. Around 320 kilometres in total. About two weeks on the water, depending on the weather.

They carry freeze-dried meals, water, beacons, plan A, B and C. They wait for weather windows and do not launch if the forecast looks wrong. “You’d be crazy,” he said.

Their longest crossing had been 65 kilometres. Tailwinds at times, small sails up, some “spicy moments” but nothing unmanageable. The trick is respect. If it turns, you hold ground, ride it out, reassess.

David is an outdoor education teacher in Kangaroo Valley. Every few years he plans something bigger than routine. One of his teammates, Paul McMahon, is an apple farmer in Pozieres near Stanthorpe. Apple season is underway. The crates are being packed while he is out on Bass Strait.

The destination now is Whitemark, and a pub. After weeks of salt, spray and rationed food, that sounded like a fitting reward.

A Horse Nearly Lost, Then Found

Des rang with the kind of excitement that comes only rarely.

His horse, Axius, had nearly been put down as a foal after suffering a broken jaw from another horse. Instead, he survived. Carefully managed. Lightly raced. Five wins from nine starts.

They took him to the Gold Coast, almost as an afterthought, for a three and four-year-old race. He ran third, carrying 60 kilos with Nash Rawiller aboard. A week later they had a throw at the stumps in a much harder race. Des managed to get odds of 100 to one early in the week, not even sure the horse would gain a start.

He did. He won.

A million-dollar race. Trained by Kieran Ma, largely prepared out of Bong Bong by Johann Gerard-Dubord, ridden this time by Tim Clark. Prize money of $579,000 for the win. Des owns five per cent.

He described it not as triumph, but gratitude. “More thankful than excited,” he said. There was no jealousy among friends and family. Just delight.

The horse now heads toward listed and group races. For Des, it already feels like the Melbourne Cup.

Honeysuckle Creek and the First Steps

Michael rang from Kiama to clarify something that matters to those who remember July 1969.

It was Honeysuckle Creek Tracking Station, near Canberra, that first received and broadcast Neil Armstrong’s descent onto the Moon and the first minutes on the lunar surface. Not Parkes, at least not initially.

The camera on the lunar module had been installed upside down. Engineers at Honeysuckle Creek worked out how to invert the signal properly before transmission. Later the dish was relocated to Tidbinbilla. Today there is a plaque marking where those first images were sent to the world.

It is the kind of detail that sits quietly in Australian history. Not flashy. Just precise.

Rates, Debt and a Drought in Utah

Kieran Kelly joined from Utah, sitting in sunshine where there should have been four feet of snow.

He spoke first about interest rates. A quarter of a percent rise, he argued, is symbolic rather than decisive. He recalled Paul Keating’s idea of the “announcement effect” — shock the system to change behaviour. One per cent in a single hit would send a clearer message than incremental adjustments.

Australia’s national debt is heading toward $1 trillion. The interest bill alone about $27 billion this year. That, he warned, is a burden passed forward.

Then he looked out his window.

In the Wasatch Mountains, mid-winter, there was no snow. Ten degrees and sunbathing weather. Golf courses open. Deer grazing on lawns normally buried under drifts. The lowest precipitation in fifty years.

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

He described it in Australian terms: like Darwin passing through an entire wet season without rain. No build-up storms. No monsoon. Just dry heat rolling on.

Insurance companies are refusing fire cover in parts of the valley. Timber houses sit among trees. Businesses that rely on ski tourism are struggling. Even whispers about future Olympic viability.

The drought there is not dramatic in the way floods are. It is simply absence.

Sharks, Science and Caution

Back home, the shark discussion continued. Bull sharks in Sydney Harbour are not new. What seems new is their apparent increase in attacks.

Water temperature shifts, turbidity after heavy rain, changing prey patterns — there are theories, but no consensus. A paramedic from the Mid-North Coast called to clarify the practicalities: in a shark bite, the immediate priority is catastrophic bleeding control. Tourniquets save lives. But so does keeping the patient warm. Hypothermia impairs clotting.

It was a reminder that debate sits alongside real people dealing with consequences.

At Bondi, the North Bondi Ocean Swim Classic went ahead. Other swims had been postponed. Swimmers will always return to the water.

Seedless Fruit and Seeded Doubts

Wendy from Stanley in Victoria wondered aloud whether seedless pumpkins and zucchinis signalled something deeper. She had seen crops without seeds, watermelons bred for convenience, strawberries that do not produce runners.

Was diversity being narrowed too far?

A horticulturist from Ballarat reassured her. Stress, poor pollination, extreme heat can all disrupt seed formation. It does not mean vegetables are disappearing. Plants still want to reproduce.

Still, the conversation drifted to grandparents’ gardens. Rhubarb, spuds, apricots, quinces. The memory of abundance grown at home rather than bought at supermarket prices.

In an era of rising costs, the backyard patch feels less nostalgic and more practical.

Letters from Santa Barbara and Beyond

Chris Morris wrote from Santa Barbara. As a boy he had grown up in Woomera, his first girlfriend the daughter of a US Air Force master sergeant stationed at Nurrungar Tracking Station near Island Lagoon.

Forty-six years later, he searched her name online. Found her. Flew to California. They married during COVID in a government-run ceremony conducted from a toll booth in Anaheim, with three minutes allowed for photographs before the next couple arrived.

Marriage in a car park. First love rediscovered. The world is stranger and kinder than it sometimes appears.

Jude and Judd wrote of 388 days without electricity on a small farm outside Perth. An outdoor shower bolted to a bush pole. Solar panels eventually installed. Eight years without television. ABC radio as companion.

There are many ways to live.

Patches and Persistence

Jennifer from Kings Langley spoke of sewing patches onto her trousers and shirts, making shopping bags from old drapes, wearing clothes decades old.

Her father once turned worn woollen skirts into overalls on a treadle machine. Waste, she said, is the real problem.

In a week of discussions about debt, drought and disappearing snow, there was something grounding in the act of mending what you already have.

Holding the Line

From iron ore trucks before dawn to kayaks on Bass Strait, from racehorse miracles to Moon landing corrections, from Utah drought to backyard vegetables, the morning held together through detail.

The country is not one story. It is thousands of them, overlapping.

Drivers watching for cattle at 30 degrees in the dark. Teachers paddling toward Whitemark. Owners checking racing results. Engineers correcting signals from space. Paramedics wrapping blankets around trauma patients. Gardeners worrying about seeds.

It is all happening at once.

And on a Sunday morning, for a few hours, it is all spoken aloud.

Listen to the podcast episode here.

Disclaimer:Australia All Over’ is a program produced and broadcast by the ABC Local Radio Network and hosted by Ian McNamara. Brisbane Suburbs Online News has no affiliation with Ian McNamara, the ABC, or the ‘Australia All Over’ program. This weekly review is an independent summary based on publicly available episodes. All original content and recordings remain the property of the ABC. Our summaries are written in our own words and are intended for commentary and review purposes only. Readers can listen to the full episodes via the official ABC platforms.

Your Streaming Watchlist for the Week: 12–18 February 2026

A Valentine’s-week slate is landing across the major platforms, with Netflix and Disney+ both dropping new titles, Max adding fresh seasons mid-month, and Prime Video and Stan rounding out the week with new arrivals. Here’s what’s coming to streaming services in Australia from Thursday 12 February to Wednesday 18 February 2026.


Netflix

12 February 2026

How to Get to Heaven from Belfast: Season 1

A new season-one series that mixes drama and relationships with a strong sense of place and personal stakes.

Watch


13 February 2026

Tyler Perry’s Joe’s College Road Trip

A comedy-driven road trip story with big personalities, big detours and plenty of chaos along the way.

Watch


18 February 2026

Being Gordon Ramsay

A new doc-style title spotlighting the chef’s world, work ethic and the pressure behind the brand.

Watch


Disney+

12 February 2026

Predator: Badlands

A new addition to the Predator universe, shifting the hunt into harsher terrain with fresh stakes and survival tension.

Watch


13 February 2026

Love Story: John F. Kennedy Jr. & Carolyn Bessette

A documentary-style title revisiting one of the most photographed modern romances, and the spotlight that followed them.

Watch


Prime Video

13 February 2026

Love Me, Love Me

A romance-focused release perfect for Valentine’s week, centred on complicated feelings and the risk of going all in.

Watch


18 February 2026

56 Days: Season 1

A new series built around secrets, pressure and what happens when relationships are tested in close quarters.

Watch


Max

14 February 2026

Neighbors: Season 1

A new series exploring what really happens behind closed doors when the people next door aren’t quite who they seem.

Watch


15 February 2026

Like Water for Chocolate: Season 2

The romantic drama returns with more passion, family tension and consequences that simmer under the surface.

Watch


Paramount+

17 February 2026

Mike Judge’s Beavis and Butt-Head: Season 3

The iconic duo return with more mischief, satire and the kind of chaos only they can cause.

Watch


Stan

18 February 2026

MAFS After the Dinner Party

A follow-up companion watch for fans who want extra reactions, fallout and behind-the-scenes-style commentary.

Watch


With fresh drops spread across the week — including a new Predator entry on Disney+, comedy and doc viewing on Netflix, plus new seasons arriving on Max — there’s plenty here to build out your queue after the Valentine’s weekend.

New on Netflix, Disney+, Stan, BINGE and Prime Video 5 to 11 Feb

A fresh wave of new series and returning favourites is landing across streaming platforms this week, with Netflix leading the schedule and strong follow-ups arriving on Disney+, Stan, BINGE and Prime Video. Here’s what’s dropping across Australian streaming services from Thursday, 5 February to Wednesday 11 February 2026.


HIGHLIGHTS THIS WEEK



Netflix

5 February 2026

The Lincoln Lawyer: Season 4

The legal drama returns, following Mickey Haller as he navigates high-stakes cases and personal challenges both in and out of the courtroom.

Watch


Unfamiliar: Season 1

A brand-new drama series exploring identity, trust and the unsettling moments when life shifts unexpectedly.

Watch


6 February 2026

Salvador: Season 1

A new series centred on power, influence and the personal cost of leadership.

Watch


Queen of Chess

A drama exploring ambition and rivalry through the intense and strategic world of competitive chess.

Watch


10 February 2026

Motorvalley: Season 1

A fast-paced new series driven by adrenaline, ambition and the personalities behind high-performance racing culture.

Watch


11 February 2026

Lead Children: Limited Series

A limited series focusing on youth, pressure and the ripple effects of decisions that change lives.

Watch


BINGE

8 February 2026

The ’Burbs: Season 1

A suburban comedy-drama exploring neighbourhood dynamics, secrets and the unexpected chaos behind quiet streets.

Watch


Stan

8 February 2026

Lord of the Flies: Season 1

A modern adaptation of the classic survival story, following a group forced to confront power, fear and human nature.

Watch


Disney+

10 February 2026

The Artful Dodger: Season 2

The historical adventure drama returns, continuing the story with new dangers, alliances and twists.

Watch


Prime Video

11 February 2026

Cross: Season 2

The crime drama returns with new investigations, deeper conspiracies and escalating stakes.

Watch


With multiple season premieres landing throughout the week — including major returns for The Lincoln Lawyer and The Artful Dodger — this week’s streaming lineup offers a strong mix of drama, crime and character-driven storytelling. It’s an easy week to refresh your watchlist and settle into a new binge.

In Cinemas: K-Pop Concerts, New Comedy, and GOMA Classics

Cinemas across Brisbane light up this week with K-Pop royalty, fresh indie comedy, and a stunning retrospective at GOMA featuring Orson Welles and Béla Tarr. Whether you’re waving a lightstick or soaking in cinema history, there’s something fresh to enjoy on the silver screen.


Opening This Week

Is This Thing On? 

In cinemas from 5 February 

A fresh new comedy hitting the big screen. Catch it at Event Cinemas (City, Chermside, Indooroopilly, Mt Gravatt), Palace, Dendy, Cinebar, Angelika, Cineplex, Five Star Cinemas, and HOYTS.


Shelter

In cinemas from 5 February

A gripping new drama about finding safety in a chaotic world. Catch it at Event Cinemas, Palace, Dendy, Reading, Five Star Cinemas, Cineplex, and HOYTS.


Stray Kids: The dominATE Experience 

In cinemas from 5 February 

Global K-Pop phenomenon Stray Kids hit the big screen in this electrifying concert film. Experience the energy of the “dominATE” tour with fellow STAYs. Catch it at Event Cinemas, Palace James St, Five Star Cinemas, and Cinebar Rosalie.


GOMA: Cinema Masterpieces

Special screenings at the Gallery of Modern Art

  • The Third Man (1949) & Citizen Kane (1941) – 6 Feb
  • Menus-Plaisirs Les Troisgros (2023) – 7 Feb
  • The Turin Horse (2011) – 8 Feb
  • The Addiction (1995) – 11 Feb

Still Showing

Addition 

Teresa Palmer’s quirky romantic drama continues at Event Cinemas, Palace, and HOYTS.


Marty Supreme 

Timothée Chalamet’s ping pong biopic is still serving up drama at major cinemas across Brisbane.


Iron Lung 

The claustrophobic sci-fi horror continues its run at Event, Dendy, and Five Star Cinemas.


28 Years Later: The Bone Temple 

The horror blockbuster is still scaring audiences at Event, Palace, and Dendy.


From the energy of a stadium concert to the quiet intensity of classic noir, Brisbane’s cinemas are packed with diverse stories this week. Grab some popcorn and enjoy a screening near you.

The Feb 1 Show

Heat, Memory and the Long Australian Road

By early February, the country is stretched thin. Heat lingers. Storms threaten. Rivers shrink in one place and swell in another. Fires burn on distant ridgelines. And when the phone lines open on a Sunday morning, what comes through is not outrage or spectacle, but the steady sound of Australians measuring the season in lived experience.

There are snowdrifts in Maine and minus twenty-six degree nights. There are forty-eight-degree kitchens in South Australia and cruise ships idling in Eden. There are blazes still active near Euroa and smoke hanging low over Newcastle. It is one of those mornings when the map feels restless.

From Rusutsu to Shark Beach

Dr Ian Francis rang from Sydney, just back from a trauma conference in Rusutsu, on Japan’s northern island of Hokkaido. A ski resort, he said, with a week of lectures and a little skiing folded in.

He had spoken to colleagues about recent shark attacks in Sydney. Not in abstract terms, but clinically. About arterial forceps. About blood loss. About the minutes that decide whether someone lives or dies. At one beach, he said, someone had opened a “shark bite kit” only to find a tourniquet, a phone number and a space blanket. The audience had laughed at the absurdity. The last thing you need, he said, is a space blanket. You need to stop the bleeding.

The conversation drifted to older habits. To swim inside enclosures. To be told as children never to venture beyond the net. On the Georges River, the fear had once been grey nurse sharks, now known to be largely sedentary and misunderstood. But the rule stood: do not swim where you are not protected.

The sea, it seems, remains indifferent to our confidence.

Nullarbor Skies and Mullamullang Cave

Photo Credit: OzGeology/YouTube

Bill rang from near the mouth of the Brisbane River, camped beside boat trailers and watching fishermen launch before sunrise. But his story belonged to the Nullarbor.

In the 1960s he had joined expeditions organised by the Sydney University Speleological Society. Through aerial photographs and long drives over limestone country, they located what was then known as the longest cave in Australia: Mullamullang Cave. They surveyed it to the one-mile peg before reaching a rock pile that seemed impassable. Later, others found the continuation. Bill returned and became one of the first to reach the end.

He described it as mountaineering underground. Vast passages rather than claustrophobic squeezes. Sand dunes inside the earth. A blind spider and a cave cockroach, one photographed and later catalogued.

Above ground, life continued across the same plain. He and his wife spent their first Christmas at Twilight Cove, south of Cocklebiddy, driving a Volkswagen Beetle along the beach. Sixty years together followed. Twenty-seven crossings of the Nullarbor. Standing at night beneath skies so wide they recalibrate your sense of scale.

He spoke of her passing three months ago, without drama. Just fact. The road, it seems, holds memory.

From Forty-One Degrees to Minus Forty-One

Jenny from Wonthaggi remembered leaving Victoria in forty-one degrees Celsius, shepherding eighteen Rotary exchange students through Los Angeles airport toward flights stretching from Alaska to Mexico.

Within days she was standing in snow at the Grand Canyon. Then in Thompson, Manitoba, at minus forty-one overnight. From heat that makes the bitumen shimmer to cold that freezes eyelashes.

She learned cross-country skiing in minus twenty. She said she would live there if she could. The extremes were less remarkable than the adjustment. The body, she implied, is adaptable. It is the shock of transition that lingers.

Back in Victoria, even a modest sprinkle of rain felt like relief.

Entangled off Tathra

Marine scientist Dr Vanessa Pirotta rang with urgency. A humpback whale had been sighted entangled off Tathra, heading north when most of its cohort should be feeding far south in Antarctic waters.

The animal was wrapped tightly, she said, around the body and pectoral fins. Not a minor trailing line but a full encirclement. It may have remained in Australian waters because it could not travel properly.

She asked listeners along the south coast to report sightings to National Parks or ORRCA. The migration corridor is vast, but distress narrows it quickly. A single whale, wrapped in rope, can alter the rhythm of a season.

Technology, Obsolescence and the Electric Question

The All Over News turned to technology. A former photographer described how digital wiped out his livelihood in three months. Decades of chemistry, darkrooms and composition skills rendered obsolete by automation. He now fixes things for a living.

Another caller reflected on artificial intelligence composing songs and generating artwork at the push of a button. Musicians, he warned, may soon feel what photographers did.

Then came the electric vehicle debate. One listener detailed kilowatt hours, tariffs and vehicle-to-load systems, describing how he powers his house each evening from his EV battery, cutting daily electricity costs dramatically. Another cited concerns about depreciation, battery replacement and charging infrastructure.

It was not a shouting match. It was generational. The sense that change is accelerating faster than people can comfortably evaluate it.

Sixteen Days Over One Hundred

From Hallett in South Australia came a letter that read like field notes from a furnace. Sixteen days above one hundred degrees Fahrenheit. Forty-eight in the shade. Mid-thirties at night. The kitchen at forty-seven.

Blue gums flowering in bone-dry calm. Bottlebrush hanging on for weeks. Sheep drinking from sixty-degree water and collapsing in piles behind one another. Frozen freight trucks parked because it was too hot to run.

People, the writer observed, had begun to go ratty. Short fuses. Best to stay home.

The heat was not theatrical. It was attritional. The kind that grinds.

Tallygaroopna and a Missing Marker

In Tallygaroopna, volunteers had restored a large steel sign salvaged from the pub fire years ago. It stood at Station Park, repainted, repurposed, a marker of identity.

One night it vanished. Bolted into the ground, nearly twenty feet high, removed cleanly. All that remained were bolts and threads.

The caller did not rage. He sounded deflated. The town had rescued the sign once. Perhaps it would do so again. Rural communities are accustomed to rebuilding, but they still feel each loss.

Alstonville and the Waiting

From Alstonville came a quieter frustration. A dance studio owner described her third break-in. Windows smashed repeatedly. Offenders known. One police officer covering Alstonville, Coraki, Wardell, Woodburn and Evans Head.

She had been waiting thirty-two days for attendance. The officers, she said, were exhausted. Overstretched. When they did answer the phone, they sometimes asked what she wanted them to do.

It was not blame she expressed, but fatigue. A sense of slow erosion.

Basketball and the Five-Hour Drive

Claire rang from Gosford, leading teams from Dubbo, Lithgow, Bathurst and Orange. Children travelling five hours to compete. A promised six-court stadium in Dubbo still unrealised a decade after the ceremonial sod-turning.

Two Dubbo players had made the New South Wales country team. Talent exists. Infrastructure lags.

Parents drive. Kids wait. The apprenticeship of regional sport continues kilometre by kilometre.

Anthem of the Seas in Eden

Photo Credit: Wikipedia/CC0

In Eden, the cruise ship Anthem of the Seas sat offshore with propulsion issues. No passengers on board, but around 1,500 crew. There was no berth available in Sydney long enough for repairs, so the vessel came south.

Crew members disembarked to walk the streets, buy groceries, sit at cafés. A floating city reduced temporarily to workers at rest.

The scale of it struck the caller. Nearly 5,000 passengers when full. Thousands of staff working below decks. A town of 3,000 hosting a ship built for many times that number.

Blazes and Tenterhooks

Kevin from BlazeAid spoke of eleven blazes across Victoria and New South Wales. Camps near Euroa, Goomalibee, Natimuk and beyond. Fences down for kilometres. Livestock losses mounting.

He recalled 1939, Black Saturday, Ash Wednesday. February has form. The state remains on tenterhooks. Grass waist-high along roadsides. One week of forties and it runs.

Volunteers are still needed. The work is slow, repetitive, necessary.

Smoke in Newcastle and Pines at Risk

From Newcastle came reports of smoke from Port Stephens and the Shortland wetlands. Asthmatics advised to stay indoors. The sky thick and acrid before six in the morning.

Further south, a part-time pine farmer described losing a ten-year plantation near the Longwood fire. Nearly at maturity. A retirement plan turned to blackened trunks. He counted himself lucky. His house survived.

Farming, he said, is long-term. You begin again.

Bathurst Evenings and Herring Island

There were lighter threads. A Festival of Speed in Canberra. Old cars revving at Thoroughbred Park. A sculptor exhibiting on Herring Island in Melbourne’s Yarra River, where few realise an island exists.

At Bathurst, the heat eased as the sun dropped. A stillness settled over the track. The simple relief of evening air after forty degrees.

In Darwin, the monsoon had finally stirred. Gusty storms. Nightcliff foreshore under heavy cloud. Rain as restoration.

Holding It Together

By the time the lines quietened, the country sounded neither panicked nor triumphant. Just occupied. Ski conferences and shark kits. Caves beneath limestone plains. Forty-eight degree paddocks. Cruise ships paused. Blazes smouldering. Junior athletes driving toward possibility.

Australia in February is a collage of temperatures and effort. The conversations are longer when the conditions are harder. The details matter.

And perhaps that is the steadier thing. Not the weather, not the machinery, not even the fires. Just people describing what they see from wherever they stand, trusting someone on the other end of the line to hear it.

Listen to the podcast episode here.

Disclaimer:Australia All Over’ is a program produced and broadcast by the ABC Local Radio Network and hosted by Ian McNamara. Brisbane Suburbs Online News has no affiliation with Ian McNamara, the ABC, or the ‘Australia All Over’ program. This weekly review is an independent summary based on publicly available episodes. All original content and recordings remain the property of the ABC. Our summaries are written in our own words and are intended for commentary and review purposes only. Readers can listen to the full episodes via the official ABC platforms.

From Broadway to Brisbane: CATS Takes Over the Lyric Theatre

This weekend sees the return of one of the world’s most controversial and beloved musicals, CATS, to the Lyric Theatre. Classical music lovers are spoiled for choice with the Queensland Symphony Orchestra performing their greatest hits, while the Brisbane Jazz Club offers a packed weekend of swing and big band sounds.


CATS

6 – 22 February 2026 | Lyric Theatre, QPAC, South Brisbane Opening Weekend:
Get Tickets

The Jellicle Ball has returned to Brisbane. Andrew Lloyd Webber’s record-breaking musical opens this Friday, bringing T.S. Eliot’s poetry to life with its iconic score, spectacular choreography, and “Memory,” one of the most famous songs in musical theatre history.


QSO Favourites

7 – 8 February 2026 | Concert Hall, QPAC, South Brisbane
Get Tickets

Whether you are a classical connoisseur or a newcomer, this concert is the perfect entry point. The Queensland Symphony Orchestra performs a selection of the most beloved orchestral masterpieces—the music that has defined history and cinema—in two special performances this weekend.


The Vicar of Dibley

6 – 15 February 2026 | Ron Hurley Theatre, Seven Hills
Get Tickets

No, no, no, no… yes! The sleepy village of Dibley comes to Seven Hills in this stage adaptation of the hit British sitcom. Expect all your favourite eccentric characters and belly laughs as the community reacts to the arrival of their new female vicar.


Sculptures & Sips

6 February 2026 | Dead Puppet Society, Woolloongabba
Get Tickets

Unleash your inner artist with a glass of wine in hand. Held at the headquarters of the world-renowned Dead Puppet Society, this workshop invites you to sculpt your own creation while enjoying a relaxed, social atmosphere.


Workshop: Relief Printmaking with Tamika Grant-Iramu

7 February 2026 | Gallery of Modern Art (GOMA), South Brisbane
Get Tickets

Learn from a master printmaker in this exclusive workshop. Tamika Grant-Iramu guides participants through the intricate process of relief printmaking, drawing inspiration from the natural world to create unique, textured works of art.


The Boor

6 February 2026 | Sandgate Town Hall, Sandgate
Get Tickets

Head to the historic Sandgate Town Hall for a one-night-only performance of Chekhov’s “The Boor.” This classic one-act comedy explores the thin line between love and hate, promising a witty and engaging evening of theatre by the bay.


Brisbane Jazz Club Weekend

6 – 8 February 2026 | Kangaroo Point 

A massive weekend of music at the city’s home of jazz:

  • Friday: Caxton Street Jazz Band – Brisbane icons delivering hot jazz and swing. Tickets
  • Saturday: Karen Anderson & the Fortunate Sinners – Soulful vocals and smooth grooves. Tickets
  • Sunday: The Queensland Jazz Orchestra – A powerful big band performance to wrap up the week. Tickets

Tyrone & Lesley’s 10th Album Launch: Keepers

7 February 2026 | Alchemix, South Brisbane
Get Tickets

Quirky, charming, and distinctly Brisbane, the ukulele-bass duo Tyrone & Lesley launch their tenth album. Expect an evening of witty songwriting, gentle humour, and “human” music in an intimate studio setting.


In Conversation: Un/tethered

7 February 2026 | Queensland Museum Kurilpa, South Brisbane
Get Tickets

Delve into the themes of memory and cultural connection. This conversation event brings together artists and thinkers to discuss the role of matriarchs and the threads that bind generations, complementing the museum’s cultural exhibitions.


Artist in Residence: Sara Nejad

31 January – 22 February 2026 | Museum of Brisbane, Brisbane City
Get Tickets

Visit the Museum of Brisbane to see artist-in-residence Sara Nejad at work. Her residency explores themes of displacement and identity through intricate illustration and animation, offering visitors a glimpse into her creative process.


The Jazz Room: Tribute to The Blues

7 February 2026 | Grand on Ann, Brisbane City
Get Tickets

Immerse yourself in the gritty, soulful sounds of the blues. The Jazz Room presents a tribute night featuring a live band performing classics that defined the genre, all set within a speakeasy-style atmosphere.


Lunar New Year Calligraphy Scrolls

7 February 2026 | Garden City Library, Upper Mount Gravatt
Get Tickets

Celebrate the Lunar New Year with creativity. This free workshop teaches the traditional art of calligraphy, allowing participants to create their own festive scrolls to welcome the new year with good fortune.


Splash

21 January – 15 February 2026 | Royal Queensland Art Society, Brisbane City
Get Tickets

Dive into this water-themed exhibition at the Petrie Terrace gallery. Splash showcases a variety of local works celebrating the ocean, rivers, and rain, perfect for a quiet cultural stop in the city.


This weekend offers a fantastic balance of high-end spectacle and community creativity. You can experience the grandeur of CATS or the QSO at South Bank, or opt for a more hands-on approach with a printmaking workshop at GOMA or a sculpture class in Woolloongabba. It’s a perfect time to re-engage with Brisbane’s cultural scene as the year gets into full swing.

Little Learners: Stargazing Theatre and Sensory Play in Brisbane

This weekend in Brisbane is all about outdoor fun and early learning. Families can enjoy a nostalgic movie night by the bay, let the kids get hands-on with messy play in Calamvale, or introduce them to the wonders of robotics at Bulimba Library.


Free Movies in the Park: Babe

7 February 2026 | Little Bayside Park, Manly
Get Tickets

Pack a picnic blanket and head to Manly for a free open-air screening of the classic family film Babe. Watching the heartwarming story of the sheep-pig under the stars, with the cool bay breeze, is the perfect way to spend a Saturday evening.


What’s In The Woods? Stargazing Special

7 February 2026 | Backbone Youth Arts, Seven Hills
Get Tickets

A magical theatre experience for the little ones. This special “Stargazing” edition of What’s In The Woods? combines gentle storytelling with sensory play, inviting babies and toddlers to explore a twinkling night-time world in a safe and engaging space.


Rugged Robot Adventure

7 February 2026 | Bulimba Library, Bulimba
Get Tickets

Calling all future coders! This hands-on workshop introduces children to the basics of programming using “Rugged Robots.” Kids will challenge themselves to navigate the bots through an obstacle course, learning problem-solving skills in a fun, interactive environment.


Messy Play: Sensory & Nature Sessions

6 February 2026 | Calamvale District Park, Calamvale
Get Tickets

Let your child dive into a world of texture and discovery without the mess at home. These sessions encourage sensory exploration through nature-based play, perfect for stimulating young minds and developing fine motor skills in the great outdoors.


Jan Powers Farmers Markets & Manly Creative Markets

7 & 8 February 2026 | Little Bayside Park, Manly 

Manly is the place to be this weekend for market lovers.

  • Saturday: Pick up fresh local produce and gourmet treats at the Jan Powers Farmers Markets. More Info
  • Sunday: Browse unique handmade crafts, art, and gifts at the Manly Creative Markets. More Info

Mums and Bubs Babywearing Fitness

6 February 2026 | Wakerley Park, Wakerley
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Get active without needing a babysitter. This fitness class is designed for mums wearing their babies in carriers, offering a supportive environment to exercise, strengthen core muscles, and connect with other local parents.


First 5 Forever: Library & Park Sessions

6 – 8 February 2026 | Various Locations
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Brisbane City Council’s First 5 Forever program continues with a huge range of free activities for under-5s.

  • Babies, Books & Rhymes: Mt Gravatt, Bracken Ridge, Sandgate (Fri).
  • Toddler Time: West End, Annerley, Chermside, and more (Fri).
  • Storytime in the Park: Frew Park Milton (Fri) & Mitchelton (Fri).
  • STEAM Storytime: Carindale & Sunnybank Hills (Fri).
  • Weekend Storytime: Sunnybank Hills (Sat) & Garden City (Sun).

Kids Sports

6 February 2026 | Wakerley Park, Wakerley
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Burn off some energy with free sports activities in the park. This session introduces kids to fundamental movement skills and different sports in a non-competitive, fun atmosphere.


Whether you are programming robots, watching a classic movie by the bay, or getting messy in the park, this weekend offers plenty of ways to engage your children’s bodies and minds. It is a fantastic mix of education and entertainment, with many free options to help keep the family budget on track.

20 Years of The Herd: A Huge Weekend for Aussie Hip-Hop

Brisbane’s music scene is firing on all cylinders this weekend, offering an incredible range of genres. You can witness a masterclass from bass legend Victor Wooten, celebrate 20 years of Aussie hip-hop history with The Herd, or dive into the mosh pit with international heavyweights We Came As Romans and Comeback Kid.


Victor Wooten & The Wooten Brothers

6 February 2026 | The Princess Theatre, Woolloongabba
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Prepare for a musical masterclass. Five-time Grammy winner and bass prodigy Victor Wooten brings his brothers to The Princess Theatre for a night of funk, jazz, and soul. Known for his mind-bending technique and groove, this is a bucket-list gig for any musician or music lover.


The Herd: 20 Years of The Sun Never Sets

7 February 2026 | The Triffid, Newstead
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A massive milestone for Australian hip-hop. The Herd returns to the stage to celebrate the 20th anniversary of their seminal album The Sun Never Sets. Expect a high-energy, politically charged set featuring full live instrumentation and the classic tracks that defined a generation.


We Came as Romans: Because We’re Doomed Tour

6 February 2026 | The Tivoli, Fortitude Valley
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Metalcore heavyweights We Came As Romans are taking over The Tivoli. Known for their catchy hooks and crushing breakdowns, the US outfit brings a massive production to the Valley, promising a loud and cathartic night for heavy music fans.


Closure in Moscow + The Dear Hunter + Anthony Green

8 February 2026 | The Triffid, Newstead
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This is a dream lineup for prog and alt-rock fans. Aussie experimentalists Closure in Moscow are joined by US cult favourites The Dear Hunter and the legendary Anthony Green (Circa Survive, Saosin). Expect intricate musicianship and soaring vocals in this triple-threat show.


HED PE | Still ‘Broke’ Australian Tour with Nonpoint

7 February 2026 | The Princess Theatre, Woolloongabba
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It’s a double dose of nostalgia and aggression. G-Punk pioneers (Hed) P.E. team up with hard rockers Nonpoint for a night of rap-rock fusion. It’s a high-octane throwback to the golden era of nu-metal.


COMEBACK KID: Wake The Dead Anniversary Tour

6 February 2026 | Crowbar Brisbane, Fortitude Valley
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Canadian hardcore legends Comeback Kid are celebrating the anniversary of their game-changing album Wake The Dead. Expect gang vocals, stage dives, and a sweaty, intense atmosphere in the intimate confines of the Crowbar.


Good Chat Comedy Club: Matt Stewart & Ben Russell

6 & 7 February 2026 | Good Chat Comedy Club, Petrie Terrace

A huge weekend of laughs at Petrie Terrace.

  • Friday: Catch Matt Stewart (from Do Go On podcast) hosting a night of top-tier stand-up. Get Tickets
  • Saturday: The absurdly funny Ben Russell (The Grub) takes the stage with a lineup of mates for a chaotic and hilarious Saturday session. Get Tickets

Bitter Belief: The Sweet Surrender Tour

6 February 2026 | Mirrorball Ministries, West End
Get Tickets

Perth emcee Bitter Belief brings his sharp lyricism and flow to the West End. Touring his new project The Sweet Surrender, this is a chance to see one of the country’s most consistent hip-hop artists in an intimate setting.


Saturday Night Comedy: An Improvised Musical

7 February 2026 | Big Fork Theatre, Fortitude Valley
Get Tickets

For something completely different, head to Big Fork Theatre. The Tuning Forks take one suggestion from the audience and spontaneously create a full-blown musical, complete with songs, dance numbers, and plot twists that will never be seen again.


From the technical brilliance of the Wooten Brothers to the raw energy of a Comeback Kid show, the variety this weekend is unmatched. Whether you are looking to bang your head, nod to some hip-hop, or laugh until it hurts, Brisbane has you covered.

New Releases: What to Watch from January 29 to February 4

Cinemas across Brisbane light up this week with a distinct mix of home-grown romance, claustrophobic horror, and cinematic legends. Whether you’re diving into a submarine of blood, calculating the odds of love, or catching a masterpiece at GOMA, there’s something fresh to enjoy on the silver screen.


Opening This Week

Addition 

In cinemas from 29 January 

Teresa Palmer stars in this quirky and touching Australian romantic comedy-drama based on the bestselling novel. A math-obsessed woman finds her carefully calculated life thrown into chaos. Catch it at Event Cinemas (City, Chermside, Indooroopilly, Mt Gravatt), Palace, Cineplex, HOYTS, and Five Star Cinemas.


Send Help 

In cinemas from 29 January 

A new horror-thriller that will make you rethink your next island getaway. Stranded and hunted, survival is the only option. Catch it at Event Cinemas, Palace, Dendy, Cinebar, Angelika, Reading, Cineplex, and Five Star Cinemas.


Iron Lung 

In cinemas from 30 January 

The viral sci-fi horror game comes to the big screen. In a post-apocalyptic future, a convict must pilot a small submarine into an ocean of blood to retrieve vital resources. Catch it at Event Cinemas, Dendy, Angelika, Reading, Cineplex, Five Star, and HOYTS.


GOMA: Cinema Masterpieces

Special screenings at the Gallery of Modern Art

  • Detour (1945) & The Godfather (1972) – 30 Jan
  • Live Music & Film: The Navigator – 31 Jan
  • High and Low (Kurosawa) – 1 Feb
  • Pacifiction – 4 Feb

Still Showing

Marty Supreme 

Timothée Chalamet’s ping pong biopic continues to serve up drama at major cinemas.


Mercy 

Chris Pratt’s sci-fi thriller is still running at Event, Palace, Dendy, and HOYTS.


28 Years Later: The Bone Temple 

The horror blockbuster continues its terrifying run across Brisbane.


Avatar: Fire and Ash 

Experience the world of Pandora at Event, Palace, Dendy, and Five Star Cinemas.


From Australian stories to the dark depths of sci-fi horror, Brisbane’s cinemas are packed with intense and engaging stories this week. Grab some popcorn and enjoy a screening near you.

Bridgerton Returns and More: What to Stream 29 Jan – 4 Feb

A new week of releases is rolling in, with Netflix leading the charge on big franchise returns and event viewing, plus a fresh family-friendly season on Apple TV+ and a new Prime Video drop to round things out. Here’s what’s landing on streaming services in Australia from Thursday, 29 January to Wednesday, 4 February 2026.


Netflix

29 January 2026

Bridgerton: Season 4

Romance, scandal and society intrigue return as the next chapter of the ton unfolds.

Watch


A Letter to My Youth

A heartfelt story that looks back on growing up, first love and the moments that shape who you become.

Watch


1 February 2026

Royal Rumble: 2026 (WWE)

The annual WWE event returns with surprise entries, rivalries and high-stakes showdowns.

Watch


M3GAN 2.0

The techno-horror franchise is back, with M3GAN returning in a new and more dangerous form.

Watch


4 February 2026

Is It Cake? Valentines

The cake-or-fake competition returns with a Valentine’s twist and more mind-bending bakes.

Watch


Fifty Shades Darker

The romance heats up as Christian and Anastasia navigate desire, trust and control.

Watch


Apple TV+

30 January 2026

Yo Gabba GabbaLand! (Season 2)

The colourful kids’ series returns with more music, dancing and playful learning for little viewers.

Watch


Prime Video

4 February 2026

Relationship Goals

A new release centred on modern love, messy expectations and what it really takes to make things work.

Watch


With Bridgerton back in the mix, a major WWE event on the calendar, and a few buzzy additions across the week, this is an easy one for building your watchlist. If you’re picking just one night to settle in, 29 January and 4 February are the busiest drop days.