29 results

Jessi Singh launches Daughter In Law on Rundle Street
Chef Jessi Singh has opened venues in Melbourne, Sydney, New York and California, and now Adelaide has its own version of his ‘unauthentic’ Indian cuisine.
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Meet King Stingray: The Yolngu surf rock band walking two worlds
With just three songs released, Yothu Yindi surf rock descendants King Stingray have captured the nation’s attention. The group’s lead guitarist speaks with us about ancient songlines, land rights and life in Yirrkala, Arnhem Land.
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The Select Committee on Wage Theft handed down its final report
The State Parliamentary report made 37 recommendations into addressing wage theft, such as making it a punishable criminal offence, establishing a wage theft inspector, and banning anyone found to have used wage theft as a business model from holding company director roles.
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Call me by my name
Prasanna Godakumbura, a Sri Lankan-born adopted Australian, is one of several South Australians who've recently reclaimed their birth name as a way of "taking back my identity and coming back to who I was originally".
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Up in smoke: Ammar Ali won’t pipe down over the shisha ban
Hindley Street hookah lounge owner Ammar Ali believes the COVID-19 shisha ban is "discriminatory" and "racist", and says he and his colleagues in the industry want to return to trade.
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Four views of the Adelaide Park Lands’ future
As the Adelaide Park Lands approaches its 200th birthday, CityMag spoke with a futurist, an ecologist, a sustainability expert and an Indigenous elder about whether our green belt will be fit for purpose in 2037.
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Three ideas you should hear at the Adelaide Festival of Ideas
We spoke to three South Australian academics appearing at this year's Festival of Ideas about how to protect space from corporate interests, how social media has changed our sense of self, and how soon we can expect to be eating pizza in space.
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‘Are you going to pay… or not?’: Untangling RCC’s late payment practices
RCC is one of Adelaide’s most-hyped Fringe hubs, flooding social media with photos of crammed crowds and stacked music lineups. But several contractors allege the organisation left them in thousands of dollars of debt months after the 2020 festival was packed down.
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