Could Australia's most famous prostitute be on the brink of bankruptcy? Tax consultant and former ATO audit manager Chris Seage reports.
Some of the country's top business people -- mostly men, of course -- gathered to kick the can for female workforce participation. Women's Agenda acting editor Georgina Dent was there.
The Melbourne Cup Day carnival draws the rich and famous like no other event in Australia. Crikey snooped around the birdcage enclosure to see who was swilling champers with who.
Hugh Morgan is at it again, espousing his climate sceptic views to The Australian. But his attacks on the Club of Rome are quite unfounded.
One man on track today is a safer bet than anyone: Lloyd Williams owns six horses in the Melbourne Cup, including the defending champ, a long neck ahead of the other Cup rich-listers.
There's Rupert Murdoch, Clive Palmer and Campbell Newman: mildly sinister, certainly absurd. It's an Australian political implosion, and there may be no turning back.
Talk about an all-star dinner. But then, Rupert Murdoch is the most powerful Australian in the world. Crikey rubbed shoulders and wondered just what the media mogul might be on about.
Qantas CEO Alan Joyce continues to rate Jetstar as an "excellent" business, but troubles abound, writes Ben Sandilands.
Why are law firms no longer raking in their rivers of gold? And is there anything to be done to save the industry?
Mysterious international student agitator Jan "Master" Shang's web stretches far and wide. Crikey investigates his business dealings and offerings to students.