SEAN NICHOLLS: The club industry has blocked national poker machine reform before. I'm not feeling safe even talking about this now. SEAN NICHOLLS: Troy Stolz exposed secrets of the club industry … emboldening other insiders to speak out.ĭELNA DUGDALE, CLUBSNSW TRAINER: I don't know how deep their tentacles go. HELEN DALTON, MEMBER FOR MURRAY: This is to try and scare me off or back off… They're picking on the wrong girl. Notorious for attacking its critics.ĭR CHARLES LIVINGSTONE, GAMBLING POLICY RESEARCHER, MONASH UNIVERSITY: Belligerent, aggressive, take no prisoners, win at all costs. SEAN NICHOLLS: For decades, ClubsNSW has been one of Australia's most influential lobby groups. There's a lot of money involved in the industry and that normally flows to the top. TROY STOLZ: They didn't want to stop the money laundering. SEAN NICHOLLS: He wants to put on the record what could be his final words. So I'm going to use the last moments to tell you this. The doctors have given me weeks, maybe at best months left to live. TROY STOLZ: Recently I've been diagnosed with stage four oesophageal cancer primary and bone cancer secondary. SEAN NICHOLLS: Troy Stolz is a gambling industry whistle blower who knows his time is running out. TROY STOLZ, WHISTLEBLOWER: The only thing worse that losing your life is wasting your life. Host: Annabel Crabb, Executive Producer: Fiona Baker, Director: Kieran -Spud' Murphy, ABC Executive Producer: Julie Hanna, ABC Head of Factual: Steve Bibb.SEAN NICHOLLS, REPORTER: Inside a hospital room … a terminally ill patient sits down to record a secret interview. International Television Production, produced in association with the Australia Broadcasting Corporation. With the visually compelling transformation of the house, the soundtrack of the decades, and extraordinary ABC archival material, Back in Time for Dinner is rich with the pleasure of recollection and nostalgia as well as the jaw dropping disbelief at how quite alien the world was not so long ago!īack in Time for Dinner is a Warner Bros. The family will live through the highs, lows and challenges that shaped family life in the 20th Century. The family's own home is meticulously transformed back in time from the 50s all the way to present day and finally into the future.įollowing carefully researched recipes they'll source, cook, and eat the same meals as everyday Australian families in each era. And, our recipes have gone from being handed down through our mothers to, simply, being downloaded.īut how has this change in what we have eaten, along with innovations in the kitchen, transformed us as a nation? To find out, the Ferrone family home has been turned into a time machine and each week, the family and their home is transported to a different decade, as they take on the dietary habits, lifestyle, cooking fads and fashion of that era.Īs Annabel Crabb guides the Ferrones, an everyday Australian family, through the different decades, Back in Time for Dinner offers a unique opportunity to tap into the social, economic, and political imperatives of our times. Along the way we've been introduced to dehydrated, frozen, microwaved, pre-packaged, and takeaway meals. In 60 years, Australians have gone from food being influenced by our British heritage to having the world on our dinner plate. The Ferrones are embarking on an extraordinary time-travelling adventure from 1950 to the future, to discover how the way we shopped, cooked, and ate has shaped our modern-day lives. In each of the series' seven episodes, this food-loving Australian family of five is throwing away their culinary comforts and kitchen appliances, smartphones and snapchat, and turning their back on its 21st Century lifestyle. We've all heard it at some stage, or even said it … 'back in my day things were better…" or 'you don't know how lucky you've got it these days…" So, what if you could find out if those statements from your parents or grandparents were true? What if you and your family could go back into the past and -live' those bygone days? Well, that's exactly what the Ferrone family has agreed to do. Join Annabel Crabb as we go Back in Time for Dinnerįrom Tuesday 29 May at 8.30pm on ABC & ABC iview, guided by Annabel Crabb, one Australian family goes on an extraordinary time-travelling adventure to discover how the post-World War II revolution in the food we eat has transformed the way we live, the fabric of the nation and defined the roles of men and women over the past 60 years.
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